DISASTROUS CONSEQUENCES

Who is Bon Appétit chef Brad Leone?

BON Appétit chef Brad Leone is receiving backlash after posting a cooking video that critics say could make people ill.

The self-proclaimed chef has posted videos in the past that his followers said made them sick, but his response has left those on Instagram baffled.

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Brad Leone is a chef on Bon Appétit

Who is Brad Leone?

Brad Leone started making his cooking videos on Bon Appétit's YouTube channel using unorthodox experiments that other food influencers have said can have disastrous effects.

The majority of Leone's videos attempt to teach his followers how to cure meat and one follower who had tried his recipe for cooking brisket claims to have become ill.

"I made the brisket recipe just as you described and now I have absolutely atrocious diarrhea — I mean mind boggling diarrhea,” she wrote on Leone's Instagram. “Did this happen to you after you ate it thanks.”

Leone quickly defended his brisket recipe saying, “I’ve never gotten sick from any of my ferments or cooking experiments.”

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“Not sure where you live but there’s a crazy stomach virus going around by me,” he said, adding, "Sorry to hear about your intense diarrhea. Stay hydrated.”

Why was Brad Leone's cooking video dangerous?

Leone's most recent video was posted on April 4, 2022, showing viewers a new way to make pastrami.

The improvised recipe used celery and sauerkraut juice instead of the traditional pink curing salt.

Viewers were quick to respond, calling the recipe dangerous and claiming Leone's recipes would cause botulism because the meat wasn't cured correctly.

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Leone's recipes have previously garnered criticism for canning seafood but it was taken down after critics said that it would potentially poison cooks.

Culinary scientist Ali Bouzari said the combination would likely cause drastic illness in those who follow the recipe, saying it could make them prone to different nitrate depending on how the product was grown.

"Just like every peach varies in sugar content or every lemon in acid, every stalk of celery is prone to different nitrate load depending on how it was grown,” told the .

Bouzari's assessment would mean that as bacteria grows, it could cause food-borne illnesses like botulism.

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