A good idea? Ethiopian raw beef dish if you’re low on iron

When Ethiopians need an iron health boost, they don’t turn to supplements – they eat kitfo, a traditional dish that consists of marinated minced raw beef and is usually eaten with a sourdough-risen flatbread called injera, says Bebeta Asfaw.

kitfo.Ethiopian_foodMs Asfaw, who owns and operates Cafe Abyssinia in Mt Roskill, said kitfo was also somewhat like “a happy meal” in Ethiopia.

“It’s something we eat at every celebration and festival, from birthdays, weddings and many family events,” said Ms Asfaw.

She said the dish was considered to be healthy because both the beef and flatbread had a high iron content.

Lincoln Tan of The New Zealand Herald writes that teff, a valued iron-rich grain, is mixed with water and left to ferment for several days to make injera.

Ms Asfaw said injera was the staple bread for Ethiopians, much like roti is in India.

“We will always make our children eat kitfo because we think the beef is good for them and will make them strong and give lots of energy,” she said.

At her cafe, Ms Asfaw serves kitfo either completely raw or slightly cooked with injera on the side.

To eat kitfo, spoonfuls of raw beef can be placed into a piece of injera or you can use your fingers to tear off bits of the flatbread and dig into the beef.

Ms Asfaw said injera could also be replaced with standard sliced bread.

Kitfo

Ingredients

1kg topside beef (freshly cut)

6 teaspoons ground cayenne pepper (mitmita*)

4 tablespoons clarified butter (nitir kebe*)

1 teaspoon cardamom powder (korerima*)

salt and black pepper

* You will find these spices in Ethiopian or Indian shops/groceries

Method

1. Cut the beef into small pieces and remove fat

2. Hand mince meat, marinate with mitmita and place the spicy ground meat in a dish

3. Melt the butter in a small pot on low heat, add the remaining mitmita, cardamom powder, (salt and black pepper to taste); remove from heat

4. Combine the spicy ground meat with the spicy butter; mix until completely marinated

5. Serve it immediately in a dish with injera or bread

A family of indoles regulate virulence and shiga toxin production in pathogenic E. coli

Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC), enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) and enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) are intestinal pathogens that cause food and water-borne disease in humans.

indole.stec.jan.15Using biochemical methods and NMR-based comparative metabolomics in conjunction with the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, we developed a bioassay to identify secreted small molecules produced by these pathogens.

We identified indole, indole-3-carboxaldehyde (ICA), and indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), as factors that only in combination are sufficient to kill C. elegans. Importantly, although lethal to C. elegans, these molecules downregulate several bacterial processes important for pathogenesis in mammals. These include motility, biofilm formation and production of Shiga toxins. Some pathogenic E. coli strains are known to contain a Locus of Enterocyte Effacement (LEE), which encodes virulence factors that cause “attaching and effacing” (A/E) lesions in mammals, including formation of actin pedestals.

We found that these indole derivatives also downregulate production of LEE virulence factors and inhibit pedestal formation on mammalian cells. Finally, upon oral administration, ICA inhibited virulence and promoted survival in a lethal mouse infection model. In summary, the C. elegans model in conjunction with metabolomics has facilitated identification of a family of indole derivatives that broadly regulate physiology in E. coli, and virulence in pathogenic strains. These molecules may enable development of new therapeutics that interfere with bacterial small-molecule signaling.

 PLOS ONE, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0054456

Bettina Bommarius, Akwasi Anyanful, Yevgeniy Izrayelit, Shantanu Bhatt, Emily Cartwright, Wei Wang, Alyson I. Swimm, Guy M. Benian, Frank C. Schroeder, Daniel Kalman

http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0054456

Atlanta bagel shop dinged for infractions

BB’s Bagels in south Forsyth County failed another health inspection recently.

bb's.bagelsThe popular bagel stop, which had failed a previous routine inspection and scored 70/C on its last two, was again flagged for not keeping bagels protected from contamination.

Points were taken off when an employee picked up trash then continued to prep food without removing gloves and washing hands.

Another employee was prepping food while wearing just one glove.

Employee drinks and clothes were stored on prep tables where vegetables were being sliced. Cigarettes were stored above food at the stove, the inspector said.

In other code violations, a container of pasteurized eggs was being thawed in stagnant water. The eggs were discarded.

BB’s Bagels will be re-inspected.

1 dead, 2 sick from Listeria in Washington: Cheesemaker vows to reopen

A Yakima cheesemaker linked to a listeria outbreak that killed one person reacted with prayer and a promise to reopen.

ucm430733“This is going to pass,” said Venedita Montes, the 71-year-old owner of Queseria Bendita. “We are going to clean, we are going to fight.”

At the recommendation of state and federal health officials, Montes and her family on Friday voluntarily recalled their products and temporarily ceased making cheese until they hire an environmental specialist to help them wipe out a particular strain of listeria that also caused problems for them four years ago.

Interviewed Saturday, they were unsure how long they would be closed, but Montes promised her customers she would resume and continue “as long as my feet are still on the ground.”

Her daughter, Sandra Aguilar, who has helped manage the company since it opened in 2000, translated for her mother, who first learned the craft as a 10-year-old girl in Mexico.

Queseria Bendita is Spanish for “Blessed Cheese.”

The state Department of Health responds to between 11 and 29 cases of listeriosis per year, but the three cases linked to Queseria Bendita shared the exact genetic structure as each other and the five cases in 2010 traced to the company, said Dr. Scott Lindquist, state communicable disease epidemiologist and deputy health officer, in a phone interview Saturday afternoon.

The medium is the message: Social media use by food and health organizations

Marshall McLuhan famously said in 1967, “The medium is the message” and got to do a walk-on in the movie, Annie Hall, where he told some pompous professor that he doesn’t understand his theories at all and is not qualified to teach.

Marshall-McLuhan-in-Annie-Hall-300x225With food safety recalls today, it’s the medium and the message, if you want to getpeople’s attention.

A paper in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior explores the increasing use of social media by food and health organizations.

Objective: To examine the use and impact of social media on 2-way communication between consumers and public organizations in the food safety and nutrition area.

Methods: In-depth qualitative study conducted between October, 2012 and January, 2013, using semi- structured interviews in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Sixteen professionals worked on the public interface within 5 national organizations with a role in communicating on food safety and nutrition issues in this thematic analysis.

Results: Five main themes were identified: gradual shift toward social media–based queries and complaints; challenges and limitations of social media to deal with queries and complaints; benefits of using social media in query and complaint services; content redesign driven by social media use; and using social media to learn more about consumers.

Conclusion and Implications: Social media penetrated and brought new opportunities to food organizations’ interactions with the public. Given the increasing use of social media by the public, food organizations need to explore such new opportunities for communication and research.

Key Words: social media, 2-way communication, public engagement, online monitoring, food (J Nutr Educ Behav. 2015;47:104-108.)

Interactive communication with the public: qualitative exploration of the use of social media by food and health organizations

25.oct.14

Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, Volume 47, Number 1, 2015

Liran Christine Shan, MSc, MSc; Panagiotis Panagiotopoulos, PhD; Aine Regan, PhD; Aoife De Brun, PhD; Julie Barnett, PhD; Patrick Wall, MB BAO BCh, MVB, MBA, MRCVS; Aine McConnon, PhD

http://www.jneb.org/article/S1499-4046(14)00676-9/abstract

7 dead, 28 sick: Listeria tainted apples appear in Thailand, no ban

Thai authorities have confirmed the existence of listeriosis-associated apples imported from the U.S. to Thailand, advising the public to thoroughly wash fruits and vegetables before consumption.

caramel.appleThe Director-General of the Department of Medical Science (DMSC) Apichai Mongkol have addressed the warning issued from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) about the recall of the apples from Bidart Bros. as the FDA have confirmed a contamination of Listeria in the apples.

Produce contaminated by Listeriosis have been confirmed in Thailand at the Laem Chabang port in Rayong province through a cargo vessel, as warned in the FDA’s document.

Two strains of Listeria monocytogenes were confirmed in the Bidart Bros apple processing plant near Bakersfield, California, the FDA said.

“Those same strains were also found in Bidart Bros. apples collected from a retailer,” the FDA said in a statement on Friday.

1 dead, 2 hospitalized: Queseria Bendita LLC recalls fresh cheeses and sour cream

Queseria Bendita LLC of Yakima, Washingtond is recalling all lots of Panela, Queso Fresco, Requeson, Cotija fresh soft cheese products and Sour Cream to include those with best by dates up to 4/16/2015 because of a potential to be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes, an organism which can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, and others with weakened immune systems.

ucm430733Although healthy individuals may suffer only short-term symptoms such as high fever, severe headache, stiffness, nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea, listeria infection can cause miscarriages and stillbirths among pregnant women.

Panela, Queso Fresco, Requeson, Cotija fresh soft cheese products and Sour Cream were distributed to Hispanic grocery stores in Washington and Oregon and the firm also sold products from its on-site store in Yakima, Washington.

The recalled products are packaged with clear plastic wrapper or plastic tub, and are stamp coded with the best by date up to 4/16/2015. The products are refrigerated and have the shelf life of up to 90 days.

The products being recalled are identified in the table below:

Product: Panela // Queso Fresco // Queso Fresco // Requeson // Sour Cream or Crema Agria // Cotija Cheese

Package size: 1 lb. // 1 lb. // 3 lbs. // 1 lb. // 1 lb. // 1 lb.

Container type: Plastic wrap // Plastic wrap // Plastic wrap // Tub // Tub // Plastic wrap

UPC: 6 10074 99341 4 // 0 94922 10602 5 // None // 0 94922 10603 2 // 0 94922 10608 7 // None

Best by date: Up to 041615 // Up to 041615 // Up to 041516 // Up to 041615 // None // None

listeria4Up to date, there are a total of three (3) cases of Listeria monocytogenes infections linked to consumption of soft cheese produced by Queseria Bendita, including two hospitalizations and one death.

The recall was the result of the investigation and samples collection by the Food and Drug Administration. The company has currently agreed to cease the production and distribution of all products.

‘If a dead animal showed up, that would be terrible’ Reports reveal critical violations at some popular Kansas City eateries

Health inspection reports reveal critical violations at some Kansas City establishments participating in one of the biggest weeks in the restaurant world.

kc.restaurnt.inspection.jan.15Several dozen restaurants are participating in Restaurant Week beginning Friday.

KCTV5 News dug through Kansas City Health Department online inspection reports and found that most of the restaurants from downtown to the Country Club Plaza that are participating in the event appeared to have at least two critical violations of the food safety code.

Food inspectors hand out two types of violations – non-critical and critical. If an inspector catches a critical violation which includes problems with food, cleanliness or maintenance, then the restaurant must take action.

The city does not grade restaurants on a scale, they just report the number of violations discovered at a dining establishment.

“Sometimes very good establishments have a bad inspection,” health department spokesman Jeff Hershberger said.

The department has 18 food inspectors that conduct unannounced visits at 3,400 places that have food permits all over the city. Restaurants could see upwards of five of those visits per year.

“These inspections for starters are a snapshot in time,” Hershberger said. “They are what was going on in that establishment on that day.”

The Foundry at 40th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue in Westport had the fewest number of critical violations – at just two – based on city inspection reports. None of the violations had anything to do with food.

“People try as hard as they can to keep it clean,” former food services worker Nate Sydney said.

Sydney said there are just a few things on an inspection report that would keep him away.

“I guess if a dead animal showed up, I think that would be terrible,” he said. “Mold, I think that’s very, very bad. If mold showed up, that would be a no go for me.”

The health department offers some advice when it comes to looking at restaurant inspections.

“Look at span of reports, don’t just look at one report and say, ‘oh that’s gross,'” Hershberger said.

KCTV5

Throwing darts: Supposed determinants of future microbial food safety in Canada for risk communication

I don’t know how such shit gets published, but it’s out there.

And has nothing to do with risk communication.

dartThis paper investigates the factors that are affecting food safety in Canada today, and those that will become increasingly important in the future. The tools used to complete this analysis are primarily the review of scientific and “gray” literature, and the analysis of multiple sources of data. We develop a methodology for ranking the factors and rank the factors according to their predicted effect on foodborne disease in Canada. The analysis reveals the top three factors that will be detrimental to food safety as pathogen evolution, increase in temperatures and increase in extreme weather events. Future studies may benefit from an analysis of factors by commodity.

Food regulatory bodies, such as the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, have a finite number of resources to address emerging food safety risks. A framework for ranking factors effecting food safety discussed in this paper will help determine the optimal distribution of resources designated for preventative and mitigative food safety programs and can better assist food regulators in anticipating emerging systemic risks. Although the focus of this paper is on the Canadian context, many of the results may be applied to other Western countries.

 Determinants of future microbial food safety in Canada for risk communication

Journal of Food Safety [ahead of print]

Sylvain Charlebois and Amit Summan

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jfs.12172/abstract;jsessionid=E2E30C24CA9EBAEF43F47AB4DEEA332D.f04t01

As always, more research required: Study analyzes tomato production practices

Doug Ohlemeier of The Packer writes that tomato production practices don’t significantly affect bacteria levels and the study’s results point to the need for additional research, according to University of Maryland and Rutgers University researchers.

tomato.traceabilityThat’s the conclusion of a study scheduled to be published in the March issue of the International Journal of Food Microbiology.

From July to September 2012, researchers from the College Park-based University of Maryland’s College of Agriculture and Natural Resources’ Center for Food Safety and Security Systems and New Brunswick, N.J.-based Rutgers’ Cooperative Extension collected and tested 422 samples from 24 conventional and organic tomato farms from four growing regions in Maryland, Delaware and New Jersey.

The researchers analyzed 259 tomato fruit samples and also examined irrigation water, compost, field soil and pond sediment for Salmonella enterica, shiga toxin and bacterial indicators in pre-harvest tomatoes.

They didn’t detect any salmonella on the farms and the prevalence of shiga toxin, a byproduct of E. coli, was very low, said Shirley Micallef, an assistant professor who heads the Maryland university’s food safety center and Plant Science and Landscape Architecture department.

One curious finding was an apparent difference in bacteria present on tomatoes that touch the ground vs. tomatoes higher in a vine canopy that don’t contact the plastic or straw mulch.

Researchers found indicator bacteria on the ones that connected with the ground but no pathogens, Micallef said.

That discovery doesn’t mean tomatoes that touch the ground shouldn’t be harvested but only points to the need for additional investigation, she said.

Another finding was groundwater from the end of drip lines possessed higher indicator bacteria counts than the source water, Micallef said.

tomato.dump.tankThe difference in microbiological quality of water signals potential risk and points to the need for growers to conduct more frequent drip line system maintenance by testing water at the end of the line, she said.

The research also found no difference in contamination risk between conventional and organic tomatoes and study was also different because it focused on small and medium-sized growers, Micallef said.

“It was encouraging we didn’t find a huge problem because here in the Mid-Atlantic, we have had outbreaks associated with tomatoes,” she said. “It’s good to see growers really paying attention to GAPs (good agricultural practices) and trying to implement food safety practices as best they can in the fields. They probably do help to reduce the risk.”