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Over the past
week, a fear of tomatoes has stricken the nation’s salad lovers. It was
triggered by a salmonella outbreak that’s stricken more than 165 consumers of Roma,
Italian-style plum, and round red tomatoes. The poisonings occurred in 17
states, mostly out West.
Not all tomatoes
seem to pose a risk. “Cherry tomatoes, grape tomatoes, and tomatoes sold with
the vine still attached from any source” appear safe, according to the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention. These exempt categories are the ones my
family tends to buy. But even so, I still wash every tomato that I serve. And a
question arises, had the tomatoes that sickened people in the current outbreak
been cleansed really well?
In our great-grandma’s
day – and probably our mom’s as well – salad greens and other fruits and
veggies weren’t handed out for family consumption until they were first scrubbed
clean in the kitchen sink. Many of today’s homeowners seem to think that’s too
much work. So they buy bags of cut lettuce and other greens that come to the
grocery store prewashed. Labels on some bagged lettuce actually say that
washing is superfluous.
Yet it’s hard to
guarantee germfree produce, as food-poisoning outbreaks have illustrated over
the past few years. That hasn’t stopped salad-packaging companies and
distributors from attempting to get germfree crops. Last year, for instance, the
salad industry began imposing fairly draconian measures on most of the nation’s
lettuce and spinach growers. Anything but voluntary, their so-called leafy greens rules make farmers jump
through numerous costly and time-consuming hoops with the goal of barring potential
germ carriers from a grower’s fields.
And by germ
carriers, they don’t mean runny-nosed toddlers. They’re talking birds, frogs,
slugs, deer, and pigs. Of course flies have been linked to E. coli and Salmonella
too.
Can we reasonably
expect farmers to keep nature out of their fields? Do we even want them to?
Part of developing a healthy farm environment involves nurturing natural
ecosystems. And animals, from slugs and birds to insects, anchor ecosystems.
I’d argue that
the mistake is to try and sanitize — much less ultra-sanitize — farms. Keep in
mind, we’re talking about environments based on dirt. Ones that are aerated and
partially fertilized by worms. Although feces of birds and bugs may harbor
germs, the tradeoff is that those same birds and bugs can help nab pests
without reliance on toxic pesticides.
To date, the leafy-greens
rules have focused on farmers that grow — well — leafy greens. But there has been
talk about extending these rules or one similar to purveyors of other types of produce.
Such as tomatoes, or apples, or berries or carrots.
Although it is
reasonable to expect that farms attempt to minimize bacterial contamination, I
think it’s not reasonable to expect
that foods grown outdoors will be antiseptic. So I’d argue that it’s also
unreasonable to expect that we can safely forego washing produce (or sanitizing
them with a spray of vinegar and hydrogen peroxide).
The lesson in all of these food-poisoning outbreaks is that we must not expect a risk-free food-supply chain. Instead, we should embrace the precautionary principle and assume that they’re all tainted (as we do now with eggs and raw ground beef) and do our best to scrub them clean.
Be just as careful, of course, in washing your hands after touching raw fruits and veggies.
Found in: Agriculture, Ecology, Environment, Food Science and Science & Society
- Lettuce Liability
- Salad Doubts
- Salmonella seeks sweets
- Clay That Kills: Ground yields antibacterial agents
- Not Just Hitchhikers
- Food for Thought : How to Wash Up in the Wilderness
- Swallowed a Fly: Insects may spread foodborne microbe to chickens
- Food for Thought : Wash Those Hands!
- Food for Thought : Sickening Food
- Undercooking makes germs strong
- Raloff, J. 1998. Wash-resistant bacteria taint foods. Science News 153(May 30):340.
______. 1998. A polished approach to food safety. Science News (Feb. 14).
______. 1996. How to disinfect your salad. Science News Online. (Sept. 28).
- Investigation of Outbreak of Infections Caused by Salmonella Saintpaul. 2008. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (June 9). [Go to]
- Food and Drug Administration. 2008. Salmonellosis Outbreak in Certain Types of Tomatoes (June 10). [Go to]
- States with persons with the outbreak strain of Salmonella Saintpaul, by state of residence. 2008. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (June 9). [Go to]

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