
ochratoxin A (35 µg/kg – ppb) in smoked paprika powder from Spain in the Netherlands
ochratoxin A (26 µg/kg – ppb) in pepper from Spain in the Netherlands

ochratoxin A (35 µg/kg – ppb) in smoked paprika powder from Spain in the Netherlands
ochratoxin A (26 µg/kg – ppb) in pepper from Spain in the Netherlands
Posted in food contamination, Food Hazard, Food Hygiene, Food Inspections, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Testing, Food Poisoning, food recall, Food Safety, Food Safety Alert, Food Testing, Food Toxin, Mold Toxin, Mould Toxin, Mycotoxin, Ochratoxin, RASFF, Toxin

Vibrio parahaemolyticus (ToxR+ Tdh+ /25g) in frozen whole raw giant tiger shrimps (Penaeus monodon) from Vietnam in France
Posted in Bacterial Toxin, food contamination, Food Hazard, Food Hygiene, Food Illness, Food Inspections, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Testing, Food Pathogen, Food Poisoning, food recall, Food Safety, Food Safety Alert, Food Toxin, RASFF, Toxin, Vibrio, Vibrio parahaemolyticus
aflatoxins (B1 = 8; Tot. = 9.7 µg/kg – ppb) in coated ravioli and barbeque flavoured peanuts from China in the Netherlands
aflatoxins (B1 = 37.6; Tot. = 45.9 µg/kg – ppb) in groundnuts from Egypt in Italy
aflatoxins (B1 = 31; Tot. = 34 µg/kg – ppb) in dried figs from Turkey in France
aflatoxins (B1 = 68; Tot. = 152 µg/kg – ppb) in dried figs from Turkey in France
aflatoxins (B1 = 13.84; Tot. = 15.77 µg/kg – ppb) in organic dried chopped figs from Turkey in Germany
aflatoxins (B1 = 15.7; Tot. = 28.0 µg/kg – ppb) in dried figs from Turkey in France
aflatoxins (B1 = 3.6; Tot. = 4.3 µg/kg – ppb) in peanut and caramel ice cream paste from Bosnia and Herzegovina in Croatia
aflatoxins (B1 = 31; Tot. = 76 µg/kg – ppb) in dried figs from Turkey in France
aflatoxins (B1 = 41; Tot. = 140 µg/kg – ppb) in dried figs from Turkey in France

aflatoxins (B1 = 0.025 mg/kg – ppm) in gluten corn from France, via the Netherlands in the Netherlands
Harper Adams University research is exploring a biological control method to improve the safety of popular Egyptian cheeses produced from raw cows’ milk.
The work is being conducted by Sherif Kandil, a PhD student and scholar sponsored by the Newton Mosharafa Fund. Sherif is in the final year of a three-year study, directed by Dr Lynn McIntyre, Senior Lecturer in Food Safety in the Department of Food Technology and Innovation.
Dr McIntyre explained: “The project was prompted by a number of foodborne outbreaks and prevalence data showing high levels of Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) and Escherichia coli (E. coli) in raw milk in Egypt.
“Cheeses made from raw cows’ milk, such as Karish, Domiatti and Ras, are popular in Egypt and Arab countries. Their strong flavour is produced by naturally occurring microorganisms in raw milk rather than the deliberate addition of starter culture organisms. However, their production also relies on smallholders in rural areas who make and store cheese under potentially uncontrolled hygiene and temperature conditions’’ Sherif added. Therefore, the growth of a variety of disease-causing (pathogenic) bacteria such as S. aureus and E. coli can be a real problem.
“These pathogens are also developing some resistance to antibiotics, but pasteurisation, normally used to kill pathogenic bacteria in raw milk, would also kill the desirable microorganisms and alter the flavours, which may be unacceptable to the consumer.”
Bacteriophages are highly specific viruses, which, unlike antibiotics, can selectively kill target bacterial species without affecting the desirable microorganisms. These could therefore have potential to target and control the disease-causing bacteria in raw cows’ milk cheeses, “an area that has not received much attention to date” according to Sherif.
For his study, Sherif collected 100 raw cows’ milk samples and processed them using a standard method to isolate and identify strains of S. aureus and E. coli in the Princess Margaret Laboratories, at Harper Adams University.
Karish, Domiatti and Ras cheeses have been successfully produced from raw cows’ milk on a small-lab-scale using traditional production methods, and their properties characterised during manufacture and storage.
A range of conditions, based on these data, has also been tested to understand how the bacteriophages behave under conditions they will be exposed to during cheese production. The last phase this year will evaluate how effective these phages are at controlling S. aureus and E. coli in milk and during further lab-scale cheese manufacture and storage.
“There is increasing interest in controlling pathogenic bacteria in food using natural non-thermal approaches without compromising the manufacturing process and product quality,” Dr McIntyre added. “We are not immune to these food safety challenges in the UK, and much of what we’ve been investigating in this project could also be applied to raw milk cheese production here.”
The Commonwealth Healthcare Corp. has lately seen an increase in ciguatera fish poisoning cases due to the consumption of various shallow- to deep-water bottom fish and has warned the public to avoid eating fish larger than about 4-6 lbs.
Ciguatera fish poisoning, or CFP, is a common food-borne illness related to the consumption of certain species of fish that have been contaminated with plankton (algae) derived toxin associated with coral reefs. The ciguatera toxin is non-detectable as it does not harm the fish and is unrecognizable when consumed. Unlike other food-borne illnesses, CFP is not transferred from cross-contamination due to inadequate food handler hygiene, food preparation, cooking, handling, and storage. In addition, the ciguatera toxin can withstand cooking and freezing temperatures and is not preventable if the fish species already harbors the toxin.

shigatoxin-producing Escherichia coli (O26 stx+ eae+ /25g) in chilled beef rump tails from Argentina in Germany
Posted in Bacterial Toxin, E.coli O26, eae, food contamination, Food Hazard, Food Hygiene, Food Inspections, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Testing, Food Pathogen, Food Poisoning, food recall, Food Safety, Food Safety Alert, Food Testing, Food Toxin, microbial contamination, Microbiology, RASFF, STEC, STEC E.coli, STX 1, STX 2, Toxin, Uncategorized
Nineteen people, nine of them children, have died from food poisoning in Madagascar after eating a turtle, sources said Thursday.
Thirty-four people were hospitalized on Monday in Vatomandry, in the east of the island, after eating the protected species, the Health and Food Safety Control Agency said.
Ten of them died, it said.
Another nine people, all of them children, died at home after eating meat from the same turtle, region’s governor said.
Health authorities have warned against eating turtles, as well two dozen species of fish, which feed on algae that can be toxic during the November-March hot season.
Dozens of food poisonings occur each year in coastal Madagascar and deaths are common.
Sixteen fatalities were recorded in two incidents in the 2017-18 hot season.
Posted in Algal Toxin, food contamination, food death, Food Hazard, Food Hygiene, Food Illness, Food Inspections, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Testing, Food Poisoning, Food Poisoning Death, food recall, Food Safety, Food Safety Alert, Food Testing, Food Toxin, Toxin
Recalled Foods , Published: March 19, 2021
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Posted in Bacterial Toxin, Clostridium, Clostridium botulinum, DVFA, food contamination, Food Hazard, Food Hygiene, Food Inspections, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Testing, Food Pathogen, Food Poisoning, food recall, Food Safety, Food Safety Alert, Food Testing, Food Toxin, Toxin

An outbreak of disease with suspected botulism has occurred among the participants in a private company in the region of Southern Denmark. The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration, Fødevareinstituttet DTU and Statens Serum Institut are working to identify the source of the infection, which is presumed to be limited to a single company.
Following a private party held on Friday, March 5, 2021, three adults have been hospitalized on suspicion of having botulism.
They are being treated with botulism antitoxin and are improving. The Statens Serum Institut (SSI) is now examining samples from the patients to find out if there was actually botulism.
SSI is also in the process of analyzing the ingredients and leftovers of the food that has been eaten by that company. No other patients with botulism are known outside the company that has been affected.
Posted in Bacterial Toxin, botulism, Clostridium, Clostridium botulinum, food contamination, Food Hazard, Food Hygiene, Food Illness, Food Inspections, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Testing, Food Pathogen, Food Poisoning, food recall, Food Safety, Food Safety Alert, Food Testing, Food Toxin, microbial contamination, Microbiology, Toxin