A visitor from the U.S. got more than they asked for at a Toronto hotel restaurant when they ordered a cheeseburger on Monday night that was served with a waiver on the side.

  • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    After reading the article, I’m on the hotel’s side.

    If someone asks for meat to be prepared in a way that Health Canada says is below the optimal temperature to kill pathogens, then the customer is putting themselves at risk and should bare any liability.

    If someone asked for unpasteurized milk, raw eggs, or live seafood, I’d expect them to get the same waiver.

    Seems quite sensible.

    • howrar@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      I would be as well were it not for one small detail, and it’s that the waiver was presented after they started eating.

      • Malle_Yeno@pawb.social
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        10 months ago

        No, still on the restaurants side. Like yes, it was a mistake and they should have presented it earlier, but asking for a burger to be done medium isn’t a common thing here in Canada. They might not have thought about the waiver until then.

        Edit: my point here is that this article is presenting the waiver itself as some kind of wrongdoing or indictment about the restaurant’s quality/safety. To me, this seems wrongheaded and the timing of the waiver being brought out seems more like “whoops we forgor” thing than a “desperately covering our ass” thing – since again, medium burgers aren’t really a thing here.

        I’m not going to fault the hotel for trying their best to please customer requests and the customer being Pikachu shock faced when he’s asked to not sue the restaurant for accommodating his McDeath Burger extra value meal.

        • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          There’s a literal west coast burger chain that serves medium as standard. Just cause you don’t ask for something doesn’t make it uncommon.

          • Auli@lemmy.ca
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            9 months ago

            Don’t care it’s still very uncommon here. Order a burger at a restaurant in the states they ask you how you want it like ordering a steak. Order a burger in Canada they do not.

      • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        That was a mistake, I’m sure. Puts the hotel at a greater liability (i.e. the customer refuses to sign), but someone eating undercooked meat would already know the risks, so this wouldn’t stop them from eating it.

  • bluebadoo@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Title feels a bit click-baity, but truly I think the waiver is reasonable. If you want food prepared outside our food safety standards and laws, you should have to waive the right to sue if you get yourself sick and die. Whether it will actually hold in court is contestable.

      • bluebadoo@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Absolutely. One could argue that the restaurant went out of its way to provide a customer food request, but many restaurants refuse to cook ground beef at anything below well-done.

        Personally, as a Canadian, I would never eat anything less than that for a hamburger, but I cook my steaks near blue at home.

        • Empricorn@feddit.nl
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          10 months ago

          I cook my steaks near blue at home.

          What’s “blue”? Just well-done?

          • bluebadoo@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            Oh no, no no. It’s seared on the outside and barely warm on the inside. Super raw. Basically you cook the outside just enough to kill pathogens and then get all the inside raw bloody and delicious.

            So I am a proponent of delicious barely cooked meat, but only in steaks and other “whole meats”. Ground meat has a HUGE surface area that contacts machinery so it gets cooked all the way through, always.

  • Cagi@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    Here in BC, anything but well done burgers are illegal in restaurants. We have steak tartar, but you need to cut the exterior layer of meat away and grind it right before serving. You might get away with doing the same for burgers, but no one does it that I know of.

    • m0darn@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      I’ve heard of a restaurant in North van that does it, I can’t recall its name though.

      • Jarix@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        At one point Vera’s burgers would because they sourced their own beef, but im not sure if that survived them expanding 10+years ago. They did start north shore so maybe it was Vera’s

        • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          It absolutely was Vera’s that’s why I liked to go there. They used to have a sign that warned you you had to ask for well done.

  • inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I’m a guy who likes a medium-rare burger and loves mett and I know the risks involved since it’s ground meat with tons of surface area and I don’t blame the hotel one bit and would have signed the waiver unlike this prima Donna.

  • T (they/she)@beehaw.org
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    10 months ago

    I worked at Outback Steakhouse (outside the US) and we were never allowed to serve burgers that weren’t well done. I’ve had to explain many times that it is due to the risk of illness from uncooked/processed meat and people still choose to be upset.

    • sin_free_for_00_days
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      10 months ago

      I thought the science says a steak can safely be rare, but not hamburger? Still a weird thing to get upset about. Although I’ve been to dinner with people I thought were reasonable only for them to turn into fuckheads with waiters. I think some people just get really dickish when they are customers. Fuck em.

      • OldTellus@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        Its any ground meat. Bacteria cant penetrate a steak to contaminate it, so as long as the outside is cooked enough its safe. When you grind up meat to expose all of the meat to outside conditions, plus any bacteria left on the grinders themselves, so it has to be fully cooked.

        • Hillock@kbin.social
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          10 months ago

          Except there are raw ground meat dishes. Beef tartare is raw ground beef and the Mettbrötchen is raw ground pork. So it certainly can be consumed safely.

          The USDA guidelines for food safety are extremely conservative when it comes to spoiling. On one hand it makes sense because we don’t want businesses to gamble with their customers health for higher profits. But it also means people are quick to dismiss them because so many of the guidelines are broken daily without incident.

          • OldTellus@lemmy.ca
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            10 months ago

            True, except that in Canada we don’t follow the USDA. Canada has very strict safety regulations, food service and production is no exception. There are ways to serve raw food dishes like this,but you have to follow certain procedures to do it, such as grinding your own meats and having separate work areas for everything, warning customers of the dangersm, and I would imagine you have even more frequent food inspections then usual. In Ontario we have a card system on any place that serves or prepares food that has to be displayed on the door or customer counter. Green, yellow, or red. Getting a yellow card is damn near a death sentence for alot of places since restaurants are so competitive.

            That doesn’t mean that regulations aren’t broken, its just that its a risk. After 15 years of being a chef, I have always refused to undercook food even if I know it would be fine. I was not willing to take the risk.

          • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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            10 months ago

            Except there are raw ground meat dishes. Beef tartare is raw ground beef and the Mettbrötchen is raw ground pork. So it certainly can be consumed safely.

            Mett, along with other raw meat products, have been found to cause quite a few food born illnesses in Germany, so it’s really not that safe.

            Same goes for eating unpasteurized dairy, handling raw chicken,

            I mean, would you really want to consume some raw that causes butchers to develop HPV warts?

          • Empricorn@feddit.nl
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            10 months ago

            What a bad argument. “Some people prepare food unsafely, so it can be consumed safely”…??

            No one I know has been hit by a car, that means they are all safe too, right!?

  • ֆᎮ⊰◜◟⋎◞◝⊱ֆᎮ@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 months ago

    Why has this been making some of the “news” recently?

    Some corporation wanted to cover it’s ass in the same my my work cafeteria warns about raw eggs when they serve Tiramisu.

    I had to sign a waiver to try some hot sauce that was 2.5M+ on the Scoville scale.

    • DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      None of these waivers hold up in court here in Canada, like, at all.

      The hot sauce ones are generally just trying to make things feel “more extreme”, trying to add theatrics to the experience.

  • Metal Zealot@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    Oh fuck off, your stupid and unsafe eating habits are your own fucked up problems, the hotel has nothing to do with this. Of course it’s a Redditor too, fucking weirdos, holy hell

  • Grass@sh.itjust.works
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    10 months ago

    Waiver should have been brought up when he requested the burger undercooked, but otherwise I see no issue.

    • BurningRiver@beehaw.org
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      10 months ago

      He’s stupid because he ordered a burger how he likes it (and probably normally orders it), starts eating it, then they ask him to sign a waiver after he’s taken a few bites?

      Sorry friend, I’m not sure he’s the stupid one here. If the waiter had told him that he needs to sign a waiver before they put the order in, that’s one thing. Doing it after they cooked it to order and he started eating is where the real stupidity occurs.

      • delial@lemmy.sdf.org
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        10 months ago

        Dude is incredibly stupid, because he’s been ordering under-cooked burgers without any conception of what he’s requesting for “Bob”-know-how-long.

        He might like medium-cooked burgers, but he has no idea what that even means. The food at the hotel isn’t less-safe than other places. They just didn’t assume he read the fine-print at the bottom of the menu and were the first to inform him that it’s not safe.

        Yeah, they delivered the waiver at the wrong time, but dude should’ve already known what he was ordering wasn’t safe. I order over-easy, soft-boiled, and sometimes sunny-side-up eggs. I know the risks, and I accept them.

        Unless you put an a ton of effort into it, ground beef is only safe well-done. To get safe under-cooked ground beef, you need to discuss your intentions with your butcher and grind the beef yourself. Even with grinding a single, quality cut of beef, you’re still gambling.

        Also, fuck you, I’m not your friend guy, here’s a rocket ship ().():::::::::::::::::D~~~~~~~

        • BurningRiver@beehaw.org
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          10 months ago

          I’ve been eating burgers cooked medium (145 degrees F) for 30 years, and never get sick. Is it a Canadian beef problem? If the hotel is that worried, just refuse to cook it less than 160 and let them order something else. But no, capitalism says that Hilton must take their money and make them sign a waiver that probably has zero chance of holding up in court.

          You actually just need to get your ground beef from reputable places, and well, I sincerely doubt Hilton Hotels cares enough to do that. My butcher grounds his own beef from chuck, sourced locally, and I don’t have to cook my burgers to sawdust to feel safe about eating them.

          I’m not your guy, pal.

          • delial@lemmy.sdf.org
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            9 months ago

            To be clear, please continue to enjoy your food the way you want it. Just know what the words that exit your mouth mean. Life shouldn’t be safe, and many of life’s greatest pleasures are not safe.

            Is it a Canadian beef problem? Nah, it’s just a problem with the definition of “safe food”. If the food is not cooked to 165F, then any bacteria, fungi, and parasites that are present could still be alive. There are no guarantees that the beef didn’t have tapeworms, and since ground beef is usually from multiple cuts, there’s a larger chance that a tapeworm has been ground up and spread throughout. It’s a tiny chance, but it’s still a chance. Steaks are less of a risk, because it’s a single cut, and the chef can visually inspect it.

            The waiver is stupid, but it has less to do with capitalism and more to do with the legal system. People sue for anything and everything, and I don’t blame companies for trying to defend themselves from that. They asked the dude to sign a waiver, because they’re afraid he doesn’t understand the risks and might sue if he gets sick.

            Funny thing is: in this case the guy didn’t understand the risks. He thought they were saying their beef is sketchy. What they were really saying is: all ground beef not cooked to 165F could be sketchy. I think he’s dumb, because he doesn’t know that a medium cooked burger involves risk but has been requesting it everywhere he goes. If he had known what a medium burger is, he would’ve just said “yeah yeah yeah”, signed, and ate the burger like an adult.

            I’m not you pal, buddy. (but we might be friends now)

    • FireTower@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Reit007 said the server explained that because the kitchen at the Hilton Toronto Airport Hotel & Suites always cooks their burgers well-done, they should sign the waiver first.

      The disgusting part of this story is a corporate mandate on well-done burgers.

      • Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        You can have ground beef below well done, but it has to be fresh ground in clean equipment. Most restaurants that don’t specialize in burgers/beef aren’t fresh grinding mean on order. If you eat medium at a place that doesn’t offer it you’re responsible for your own decisions.

        • Akasazh@feddit.nl
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          10 months ago

          I think cleanliness standards for kitchens should be governement ordained to be clean enough but to have to serve a waiver.

          If you’re running a kitchen and are to dense to follow health and safety laws you shouldn’t be able to operate.

          In his circumstance should the onus be placed on the customer.

          • Obi
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            10 months ago

            The restaurant was literally following health and safety rules in place in Canada, by not offering undercooked burgers from pre-ground beef. The customer wants it anyway, so in comes the waiver. Tbh my perspective is they shouldn’t have accepted if it goes against health code, waiver or not.

          • Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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            10 months ago

            You’re thick as pudding.

            A clean kitchen isn’t enough. If your burger was made of preground beef you can’t eat it medium. If ONE of the pieces of meat that was processed that day in the factory was contaminated all the resulting ground meat is also contaminated. That’s why you cook ground meat to well done.

            If a restaurant wants to offer medium burgers, or steak tartare or some other form of undercooked ground beef, they have to grind it themselves, in small batches, and use practices that reduce contamination. They’ll usually still warn you on the menu because there is still a risk. There are restaurants in Japan that serve raw chicken sushi, same concept. If you ask for undercooked chicken at a restaurant, you’re an idiot, unless you’ve gone somewhere that can do it right, which usually starts from raising their own specially vaccinated chickens.

            Restaurants that don’t offer undercooked ground beef are just trying to warn you that you’re being an idiot ordering undercooked ground beef. If you make burgers at home from store bought ground beef and cook them to medium, same thing.

            • Akasazh@feddit.nl
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              10 months ago

              Or don’t allow beef with contamination risks at all … Industry standards can be enforced.

              • Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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                10 months ago

                That’s sooooo dumb holy crap. You’re so combative on things you clearly don’t understand at all!

                Industry standard are never “all beef must be sterile” that’s insane. Industry standards are “you’re allowed max one rodent hair per 100g of food” or “you’re allowed 3 insect larvae per pound of canned elderberries” (real FDA regulations). Industry standards ARE being enforced, they include minimum cooking temperatures for meats.

                I know you won’t understand why “don’t allow contamination risks” is absolutely brain-dead. I don’t have the crayons to explain it to you. Do a couple hours of research, figure out where contamination in beef comes from and what rules and regulations are in place to reduce the exposure risk. Then look up the way typical slaughterhouses and meat processors work, including the health and safety regulations that reduce contamination risk. Then look up why steaks can be cooked medium but not ground beef. Then look up what you need to do to make raw ground beef safe like steak tartare and med burgers. Then look up the cost associated with any single test for bacterial contamination on surfaces.

                Once you’ve got a good understanding of the situation, in general you’ll realize the regulations that are in place make sense and that more stringent regulation wouldn’t solve anything in a cost effective way, nor meaningfully reduce human contamination and disease.

                That or you won’t understand enough and you’ll still have a crazy opinion.

                Or, just maybe, in the rare case where you’re a brilliant, reasonable person, you’ll support some small budding initiative already in regulatory circles that makes a small incremental improvement to safety at a reasonable cost.

              • nyan@lemmy.cafe
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                10 months ago

                You willing to pay $100 per burger? How about $1000? A cow isn’t sterile. You’re starting with contaminated source, so you have to decontaminate it, test it to make sure it really is decontaminated, and seal it medical-grade sterile to ensure no contaminants are reintroduced. And it all goes out the window the moment someone screws up, which happens even with food that absolutely must be sterile, as proven by the shenanigans with baby formula over the past few years. It simply isn’t worth it when cooking ground beef thoroughly is so much easier and cheaper, and most of the population is okay with it.

      • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        you can have undercooked beef because bacteria can’t penetrate that far below the surface (opposed to chicken), if it is ground then that safety net isn’t there

      • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        Its 160°F in center mandate, or you would lose your food service license. Why would a hotel risk that for one customer that wants it cooked below standards

      • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        It’s not a corporate mandate, it’s a provincial government mandate that exists in the whole of Canada as far as I know (food safety for restaurants being under provincial jurisdiction) and for good reasons, the risks associated with undercooked ground beef aren’t worth it to please the small % of clients who would want it.

        You want your patties medium? Buy a whole piece of meat, remove the outer layer, ground it and cook it, don’t expect restaurants to do that for you.

        • Reddit_Is_Trash@reddthat.com
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          9 months ago

          What constitutes a small % to you?

          Eating burgers cooked medium is very common. Well done beef is no different than eating leather.

          • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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            9 months ago

            Ground beef isn’t a steak and restaurants have health guidelines to follow because they don’t want to make you sick, what you do at home is your problem (until it becomes ours because you get e.coli from undercooking ground beef that you didn’t prepare yourself).

            • Reddit_Is_Trash@reddthat.com
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              9 months ago

              I cook store bought ground beef burgers to medium rare multiple times a year and not once has there been an issue

              • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                9 months ago

                Yeah and some people smoke their whole life and never get lung cancer, it doesn’t make it safe to smoke.

                There’s e.coli recalls every year, but hey, don’t let that stop you, not as if it could kill you or handicap you long term to catch it (need an /s on that or you’re good?)

                Do yourself a favor, get a meat grinder and make your own ground beef if you want to eat it medium. It’s cheaper and much more delicious.

      • delial@lemmy.sdf.org
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        10 months ago

        Nah, the disgusting part is the consequences of factory farming and humanity’s domination of the planet and desire for meat.

        Well-done burgers are the band-aid for the deeper problems.

  • vaseltarp@lemmy.basedcount.com
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    10 months ago

    In Germany they sell ground beef that is save to eat raw. So either get save meat or, if your ground beef is not safe, bring this up directly when someone orders a medium or rare burger and not after the person already started eating.

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    The only thing is why not get the waiver with the appetizer, before it’s served or together? That’s the negligence on the Hilton Restaurant’s part and really doesn’t have meaning if this user did happen to get E.Coli. Ordering medium ground beef at a non-specialty venue is kind of stupid to begin with.

      • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        That’s probably the intention but it’s so rare (haha) to order undercooked patties in Canada that they might not even have known a waiver was necessary.

  • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    Technically you can cook a hamburger to medium and have it be safe to eat, but I really don’t see most restaurants doing sous vide for hamburgers.

  • ulkesh@beehaw.org
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    10 months ago

    First, the waiver should have been provided prior to serving the meal.

    Second, and off topic, Toronto Pearson area seems fraught with problems. From second-hand experience of a family member, they got delayed by 11 hours after the 3 hour layover, simply because the airport apparently doesn’t know what electric surge protection is (that was their excuse, that a surge occurred in the airport grounding their plane).

    Last, anyone who wants less-than-well-done meat should expect a semblance of risk and expect the restaurant will want to legally protect themselves. But it’s pretty shitty to get the waiver after being served.

    So as a throwback to the AITA subreddit…ESH.

  • LoamImprovement@beehaw.org
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    9 months ago

    Yeah, this isn’t like the hotel thinks its food is unsafe to eat, this is just acknowledging that the customer wanted their beef cooked below safe standards.

    Isn’t this usually covered by a disclaimer on the menu though?

  • dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    As a consumer, I would see the presence of such a waiver as a prompt to think about what necessitated this in the first place. Perhaps this kitchen isn’t as clean as it could be, and something happened to prompt this level of (legal) caution. Yeah, it could have been an overzealous patron looking for a payday, but maybe someone had a legit case?