Category Archives: Technology

USA – Raw Milk Outbreaks -Campylobacter

Food Poisoning Bulletin Campylobacter

A Campylobacter outbreak associated with raw milk produced on a farm in Cambridge, MN is the fourth Campylobacter raw milk outbreak in four months.  The outbreak, which has sickened at least six people,  prompted officials to temporarily halt on-farm sales of raw milk while they investigate and issue a statewide consumer advisory.

Campylobacter is a bacteria that is transfered via the fecal-oral route, meaning those who develop Campylobacter infections have ingested microscopic amounts of animal feces. Pasteurization kills bacteria that cause disease, but raw mik is not pasteurized

Research – Salmonella Protective Switch

HACCP Europa

Salmonella Typhimurium causes food poisoning in people and can be fatal in the elderly or very young. Recent technological advances in the field known as proteomics are allowing researchers to explore how proteins, the workhorses of the cell, allow the bacteria to infect and cause illness. Most technologies that examine a cell’s ensemble of proteins do so by chopping the proteins up. Adkins, lead author Charles Ansong and other colleagues wanted to look at whole proteins, which provides more information such as how proteins are regulated.

For the first time, researchers have found a particular kind of molecular switch in the food poisoning bacteria Salmonella Typhimurium under infection-like conditions. This switch, using a process called S-thiolation, appears to be used by the bacteria to respond to changes in the environment during infection and might protect it from harm.

Commercial Advert – Listeria Predictive Modelling – Purac

I have not checked this out yet I am just passing on the information for those of you that may have an interest.

Purac Listeria Control Model 2012 predicts the growth of Listeria monocytogenes in food products, with the use of eight food characteristics. Purac has already launched a number of editions of the model, yet the recently launched Purac Listeria Control Model 2012 is an online version on the forefront of Listeria growth modeling.

It is of great value during product development, as it has been developed using over 2500 individual growth curves of statistically designed experiments. It enables you to save valuable R&D cost and increase speed-to-market.

Purac

Research – British Food Journal – Deliberate Food Safety Violations in the Food Chain

Emerald

Abstract :

Purpose – Business malpractice in supply chains raises food safety risks for downstream buyers including consumers. This paper analyses the multiplicity of behavioural factors influencing producers’ motivation to intentionally violate food safety norms.

Design/methodology/approach – We review existing disciplinary approaches for the analysis of behavioural risks. Based on this review, an analytical framework is developed which provides a base for an interdisciplinary institutional analysis of behavioural risks in food chains.

Findings – The reviewed approaches on behavioural risk share the view that deviance is the result of multi-goal and (potentially) opportunistic decision-making of bounded rational individuals. The analytical framework presented in this paper integrates these approaches.

Research limitations/implications – The analytical framework provides a rough categorization of behavioural drivers. It neither details the context-dependent subcomponents which determine the utility outcome within each category nor the methods that should be used to analyse them.

Originality/value – A behavioural economic analysis based on the framework means opening up the black box of the regulatees’ action situation by incorporating the subjectively perceived material incentives in addition to immaterial motivations such as reputation effects, social norms and community pressure into the analysis. Based on an understanding of producers’ motivation, proper institutional solutions can be implemented to enhance producers’ compliance with food safety norms.

Listeria – Flash Pasteurisation

Food Quality News

Using flash pasteurisation in tandem with antimicrobial lauric-arginate-ester (LAE) can curb the growth of Listeria monocytogenes (LM) on frankfurter sausages for up to 12 weeks, according to new US Government research.

Flash Pasteurisation

Research Papers – Raw Milk Cheese Microbiology, Salmonella PCR, Hydrogen Peroxide – Listeria

Science Direct – Microbiology of Raw Milk Cheese

Cheese may be manufactured in the United States using raw milk, provided the cheese is aged for at least 60 days at temperatures not less than 35 °F (1.7 °C). There is now increased concern among regulators regarding the safety of raw milk cheese due to the potential ability of foodborne pathogens to survive the manufacturing and aging processes. In this study, 41 raw milk cheeses were obtained from retail specialty shops, farmers’ markets, and on-line sources. The cheeses were then analysed for the presence of Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella, Escherichia coli O157:H7, Staphylococcus aureus, and Campylobacter. Aerobic plate counts (APC), coliform and yeast/mould counts were also performed. The results revealed that none of the enteric pathogens were detected in any of the samples tested. Five samples contained coliforms; two of those contained E. coli at less than 102 cfu/g. Three other cheese samples contained S. aureus. The APC and yeast-mould counts were within expected ranges. Based on the results obtained from these 41 raw milk cheeses, the 60-day aging rule for unpasteurized milk cheeses appears adequate for producing microbiologically safe products.

Science Direct – Salmonella Serotyping PCR

The most commonly used method for serotyping Salmonella spp. is based on the Kaufmann–White scheme, and is composed of serological reactions using antibodies to LPS agglutinins. The multiplex PCR used in this investigation was established by Kim et al. to serotype the 30 most common clinical Salmonella serotypes, as determined by CDC. The PCR assay consists of two five-plex reactions and a single two-plex PCR reaction, based on six genetic loci from Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium and four loci from S. enterica serotype Typhi. In this investigation, we further evaluated the method for serotyping Salmonella spp. using a reference collection, environmental samples collected from a Mid-Atlantic region tomato farm study, four food matrices spiked with different Salmonella serotypes and a proficiency test. The PCR assay was first evaluated using DNA isolated from pure cultures of isolates obtained from various clinical and environmental samples, and then DNA isolated from broth cultures of food matrices of “Red round” and Roma tomatoes, Romaine lettuce, green onions and Serrano peppers spiked with serotypes Newport, Typhimurium, Javiana and Saintpaul, respectively. The results showed that the PCR assay correctly serotyped Salmonella spp. from the clinical, environmental, spiked food matrices, and proficiency test samples. These findings are significant because the PCR assay was successful in the identification of Salmonella in the spiked samples in a broth culture containing other non-salmonella organism. This method may be a useful resource for the food safety community.

Science Direct – Hydrogen Peroxide – Listeria

The impact of sodium hypochlorite and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2 at 1 and 5%) solutions on Listeria innocua in red bell peppers, total mesophiles in strawberries and total coliforms in watercress was studied. Quality attributes such as colour, firmness and pH were studied for all products; total anthocyanins content was determined for strawberries. Sensorial analyses were also carried out for all products. Results showed that H2O2 (5%) provided the highest reductions of microbial loads. Besides H2O2 (1%) had a lower impact, it was more effective than water-washings. Sodium hypochlorite solutions lead to microbial reductions comparable to water risings. In terms of quality, H2O2 (5%) was the solution with higher negative impact on products’ colour. For strawberries, such colour alterations were also detected by sensorial analyses. The anthocyanins content decreased significantly. Overall it was found that H2O2 (1%) was a good sanitizer solution, since microbial reduction was attained while quality factors did not suffer considerable alterations.

E.coli Vaccine for Cattle

Food Safety News 

A Canadian biotech company has developed a vaccine for cattle that prevents them from shedding E. coli in their manure, and its CEO now hopes the Canadian and U.S. governments will help spread the vaccine to combat the threat posed by E. coli contamination in beef.
E. coli illnesses cost the Canadian medical system more than $200 million a year, but vaccinating every cow in the country would cost less than $50 million.

World Data Center for Microoganisms-Reference Strain Catalogue

WDCM

This catalogue was produced to enable broader and easier access to the reference strains listed by the ISO TC 34 SC 9 Joint Working Group 5 and by the Working Party on Culture Media of the International Committee on Food Microbiology and Hygiene (ICFMH-WPCM) in their publication Handbook of Culture Media for Food and Water Microbiology. It fulfils a need expressed by these bodies for a unique system of identifiers for strains recommended for use in quality assurance.
 
UKAS in the UK will in time be expecting the use of WDCM Reference numbers in methods when the use of reference strains are quoted. This is to remove commercial bias from different culture collection material reference numbers

How Many Bacteria Do You Add to Your Environment? – 37 Million Per Hour

Science Daily

A person’s mere presence in a room can add 37 million bacteria to the air every hour — material largely left behind by previous occupants and stirred up from the floor — according to new research by Yale University engineers.

Overall, they found that “human occupancy was associated with substantially increased airborne concentrations” of bacteria and fungi of various sizes. Occupancy resulted in especially large spikes for larger-sized fungal particles and medium-sized bacterial particles.

Researchers found that about 18 percent of all bacterial emissions in the room — including both fresh and previously deposited bacteria — came from humans, as opposed to plants and other sources.

Mustard Seeds for Controlling Food Spoilage?

Science Codex 

University of Alberta researcher Christina Engels has discovered how to extract a compound from mustard seeds that can protect against food spoilage.

Engels recovered a particular compound—sinapic acid—from mustard seed meal, which shows antibacterial effects against such strains as Staphylococcus aureus, E. coli and Listeria monocytogenes, all of which can cause grave illness and death in humans. Canada is the world’s largest exporter of mustard seed.

Link to Paper