Doesn’t raw egg give you salmonella?/quote]
As expected of the salmon country!
Okay, lame jokes aside, what Fo1wS said. Quoting one site,
In Japan, however, eating raw eggs is okay. Why?
As opposed to most other countries, where it's assumed that eggs will be cooked before being eaten, in Japan, it's assumed that eggs will be consumed raw. To this end, stringent standards are in place to maintain a level of hygiene within egg-producing facilities that prevents most chickens from becoming infected with salmonella in the first place.
On top of this, once the eggs are laid, they are washed, disinfected (commonly with UV light), and inspected via a variety of tests to search for dirt, cracks, and other abnormalities. Most facilities run their eggs down a winding course of various conveyor belts that pass each egg through several different tests.
And a video for good measure.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_RNhPURpwk&feature=emb_title&ab_channel=NABEL
So yes, Nishikata-chan is safe. And if you ever find yourself in Japan, try their raw eggs. Its probably the only place where you can actually eat it safely.
@shinjikun10 No. Not Asia.
Japan. There are plenty of Asian countries where the eggs aren't "safe for raw consumption". I certainly don't trust mine. I know you don't mean it that way but I have to correct it or some idiot may get salmonella. This is because unlike Japan, we don't normally eat them raw. Standards are more lax. In Japan, eggs are EXPECTED to be eaten raw.