It was raw egg in mayonnaise at a bakery prepared by Colonel Mustard; 13 sick with salmonella, 5 hospitalized in Canberra

Australia has an egg problem.

Health types have said as much in the past, but once again, salmonella in a raw egg dish has sickened a bunch of Australians, with restaurant owners claiming ignorance, no evaluation of whether people are doing what they say they are doing, and an opaque version of public health transparency with the consuming public.

The co-owner of the Canberra business at the center of a Salmonella outbreak says she is working with ACT (Australian Capital Territory, sorta like Washington, D.C., and home to the federal capital, Canberra) health authorities to ensure the safety of its food.

It is believed raw egg in mayonnaise made at the Silo bakery in Kingston is to blame for the outbreak.

ACT Health has confirmed 13 people have been affected by Salmonella bacteria.
Five were hospitalised with dehydration after suffering severe vomiting and diarrhoea.

The bakery has been closed by health authorities until the source is confirmed.

Co-owner of Silo Leanne Gray says she is scrupulous about food hygiene and is perplexed by the outbreak.

"Until those sub-species [lab] results come back the information is not conclusive," she said.

"But I do understand the Health Department have to take actions if they have suspicions and we have nothing to hide."

"We’ve decided as of Friday, no more mayonnaise and that’s forever."

But the information about the bakery was provided by ABC News. The ACT Health Directorate would only say it is currently investigating an outbreak of Salmonella gastroenteritis linked to a Canberra food business.

ACT Chief Health Officer, Dr Paul Kelly said, “Salmonella has been identified in mayonnaise containing raw egg, with further tests of food and environmental samples pending."

Ms. Gray, the bakery owner with “scrupulous food hygiene” has apparently never heard of raw eggs as a source of salmonella – although she did point out her eggs were free-range.

Hundreds of people have been sickened in Australia in the past five years from consuming undercooked eggs or dishes containing raw eggs, including 111 sick with salmonella from home-made aioli — a garlic mayonnaise that includes raw egg – at the Burger Barn in Albury, Australia last year. Other Australian outbreaks are available at these links.

http://bites.ksu.edu/blog/139189/10/01/25/it-was-aioli-australian-salmonella-toll-albury-rises-111-linked-raw-egg
http://barfblog.foodsafety.ksu.edu/blog/137965/07/12/25/raw-eggs-sicken-50-aussies
http://barfblog.foodsafety.ksu.edu/blog/139946/08/12/29/136-hospitalized-australian-bakery-fined-40000
http://barfblog.foodsafety.ksu.edu/blog/139553/08/02/17/tasmania-rest-australia-wake-raw-egg-risks
http://barfblog.foodsafety.ksu.edu/blog/140014/09/02/08/raw-egg-hollandaise-sickens-20-upscale-retirement-home

In May 2011, the Sydney Morning Herald reported the number of Australians sickened by egg-related salmonella outbreaks rose from 96 to a staggering 753 per year between 2001 and 2008. The rate fell to 358 in 2009, but eggs are still responsible for more than a third of all foodborne outbreaks linked to salmonella in Australia.

Martyn Kirk, a senior lecturer in epidemiology at the Australian National University, said eggs had become the most common cause of food-related disease outbreaks.

Restaurants are responsible for the bulk of poisonings: 40 per cent. And while cooking will kill salmonella, restaurants are allowed to serve foods containing raw eggs.

”Most of the vehicles we see associated with outbreaks are foods where the eggs are completely uncooked; things like chocolate mousse, tiramisu, hollandaise sauce and aolis,” Mr Kirk said.

While egg producers in NSW are now required to be licensed with the NSW Food Authority, no government body conducts regular bacterial tests on eggs, or monitors the presence of salmonella on farms.

A risk assessment commissioned by the Australian Egg Corporation in 2004 found refrigerating eggs could reduce outbreaks of salmonella. The lead author of the report, the microbiologist Connor Thomas, told the Herald salmonella cannot grow in temperatures below seven degrees, and refrigeration reduces the breakdown of protective membranes inside the egg that stop the bacteria’s growth.

But in April 2011, Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) introduced changes to the food standards code, omitting any regulations related to temperature control.

A spokeswoman for FSANZ said it chose to exclude refrigeration requirements from the standard, in part, because of ”the substantial cost of implementing such an option.”

Ms. Gray, you can still serve mayonnaise. Use pasteurized liquid eggs, or pasteurize eggs yourself, or buy it commercially.

But celebrities have tea here: Victorian-style cafe fined over salmonella

I don’t care about personal or business fetishes – go ahead and wear that Victorian garb – but if you’re going to make chocolate mousse cake and serve it to a bunch of people, use pasteurized instead of raw eggs.

A U.K. court heard that 10 customers and staff were stricken with salmonella after eating a chocolate mousse cake made with raw egg at Badgers’ cafe, Llandudno, in Sept, 2009. Badgers was fined £8,015, which will cut into the Victorian-era outfits worn by staff.

Badgers cafe admitted selling the cake when unfit for human consumption and apologised to those affected; the company also pleaded guilty to two breaches of food hygiene regulations a year later.

But not until Rhian Gilligan made the best food safety legal defense ever: the cafe had attracted high-profile politicians and celebrities and was visited by many holidaymakers during the summer.

In a statement after the case the Badgers company said it would like to apologize "unreservedly to those affected.

"Badgers has always sought to achieve the highest standards in food hygiene and customer service and continues to do so.”

More focus on food safety, less on the costumes.

Raw egg in mousse, cows hazards to NZ health

Chocolate mousse cake made with raw egg whites sickened 21 people in two different groups in Sept. and Oct. in the Timaru district of New Zealand.

Another 21 cases of campylobacter were recorded in South Canterbury and 28 cases of cryptosporidiosis in the same time period, according to medical officer of health Dr Daniel Williams.

The Timaru Herald cited Dr. Williams as saying, "Many of these cases are people who live in rural areas and are associated with the dairy industry. Cryptosporidium is a microscopic parasite found in the gut of many animals both wild and domestic. People become infected when the parasites are swallowed. This may be from contaminated water or more usually from direct contact with infected animals. … Toddlers on farms are particularly at risk. Although it can be difficult, children should be supervised to prevent them swallowing infected material. The best protection for people who are in close contact with animals is thorough hand washing using plenty of soap, cleaning under finger nails, rinsing hands and drying on a clean towel."
 

Raw egg mayo sickens 170 with salmonella at Australian restaurant, fined $1300

ABC News reports an Albury take-away restaurant has been fined $1,300 over a salmonella outbreak early this year.

One hundred and seventy people got sick in January when they ate a contaminated home-made raw egg mayonnaise from the Albury Burger Bar.

The New South Wales Food Authority says the business has been fined for selling unsafe food and handling food in an unsafe manner.

It has been placed on the department’s "name and shame" list.
 

Raw egg aioli promoted for Ocean’s Eleven screening

Dinner and a Movie on TBS is incredibly hokey and contrived, which makes it perfect entertainment fare along with trashy magazines and Tom Robbins novels while recharging at the beach.

During a (probably repeat) screening of the George Clooney Ocean’s Eleven remake on Friday night, the recipe to accompany the movie was ‘Risky Aioli;’ risky because, as the hosts said, the recipe included raw egg.

The host did say that if you didn’t feel up to it (were a wus) a tablespoon of commercial mayo could be substituted instead. They went ahead with the raw egg.

I’m guessing the egg-of-course-we-only-promote-the-cooked-kind industry didn’t register any health objections when the episode originally aired.

Wing Wah pays out £65,000 after 50 diners fall sick

The Birmingham Post reports that a Chinese restaurant in the U.K.’s Black Country – and I know what that means having now been there — is being forced to pay out almost £65,000 after nearly 50 of its diners went down with food poisoning.

Kwai Lun Chiu, a director of the Wing Wah restaurant in Oldbury, was also given a 12 month Community Order and told to carry out 100 hours community punishment.

The sick diners included a 22-month-old baby and an 80-year-old man, who had to spend 12 days in hospital.

They all caught salmonella after the buffet restaurant chefs used raw eggs in a tiramisu dessert, Wolverhampton Crown Court heard.