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Making
Sandwich Meats Safer to Eat
Excerpt
By
Dennis Thompson Jr., HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- If you're
worried about contaminated luncheon meats, here's something to
chew on.
Purdue University researchers say they've developed a way you can
pasteurize your bologna, ham and salami at home, killing off harmful
bacteria in the process.
Just wrap each slice in plastic, dip it into water heated to
185 degrees Fahrenheit for 20 seconds, then slip it into cold
39-degree water for the same amount of time, says Tim Haley of
the university's Center for Food Safety Engineering.
Haley says the procedure will eliminate harmful bacteria from
the surface of prepared meats, where the germs are most likely
to be found, without affecting the taste or quality of the food.
His team's research also found that treating meat with this
process apparently extends its shelf life. Some of the meat used
in the study has been refrigerated since December 2001 and, after
five months, is comparable in quality to fresh-packed bologna,
Haley says.
The study will be presented at the Institute of Food Technologists'
annual meeting in Anaheim, Calif., later this month, Haley says.
Haley developed the process as a means for food companies to
eliminate potential contamination, but he says it could be easily
adapted to the home.
"Certainly, this is something consumers could do as well,
if someone wanted to take that extra step," Haley says.
Two slices can be wrapped together and treated at once, but
the length of immersion should increase to 60 seconds, according
to the researchers. They report that it's not practical to treat
more than two slices at once, because the longer immersion time
causes the food quality to deteriorate.
Haley's research focused on sterilizing bologna that had been
tainted with Listeria monocytogenes, a bacterial food contaminant
that causes the disease listeriosis, which is particularly harmful
to pregnant women and people with weakened immune systems.
Luncheon meats usually are cured in loafs, which is relatively
sanitary -- until the loafs are cut into individual slices. "When
they go to slice the meat at the factory, there's no process to
eliminate any contamination prior to packaging," Haley says.
Listeria has been found in processed foods that become
contaminated after processing, like soft cheeses and cold cut
meats, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC).
About 2,500 Americans become seriously ill from Listeria
infection each year, and of those 500 die, the CDC says.
The process developed by Haley's team kills as many as 1 million
Listeria germs on a piece of bologna, a rate Haley calls
"overkill."
"I wouldn't expect to see more than 10 to 100 organisms
on a contaminated piece of bologna," Haley says.
Similar pasteurization techniques, also known as flash pasteurization,
are already being used in a number of areas, says Caroline Smith
DeWaal, director of food safety for the Center for Science in
the Public Interest. For example, fruit juices and raw shellfish
are being treated with similar processes to make them safer.
But DeWaal also says Haley's process may not prove practical
for industry, given that it involves treating individual slices
of meat one at a time.
"The challenge is to get it to be feasible to the food
industry, given how we currently package and consume ready-to-eat
meat," she says.
Haley says the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which funded
his research, specifically wanted his team to come up with a process
that could be adopted quickly by industry to address concerns
about food safety. "They didn't want to wait five or 10 years,"
he says.
As some segments of the food industry are beginning to individually
wrap servings -- for example, individually wrapped hot dogs --
Haley says he hopes his process will be adopted by the major luncheon
meat companies.
"The idea behind packaging one slice or two slices is you
could open what you need and the rest would be fairly well protected,"
he says.
Listeria and other such bacteria are a major worry for
the meat processing industry, according to Josee Daoust, the public
affairs manager for the American Meat Institute, a trade group.
"Any weapon we have to combat that is something we're interested
in," Daoust says, although he adds that he is not familiar
with the Purdue research.
What To Do
To learn more about food safety, visit this
U.S. Department of Agriculture site. For more on federal efforts
to combat Listeria monocytogenes, check the
Food Safety and Inspection Service.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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