More often than we realize, we seem to leave all that food safety mindset at work and make basic mistakes when we use our own kitchens. Most of us fall short on what we can do to bring awareness into our family or community to principles that should be implemented when we prepare food and cook.
As food safety professionals we are expected to apply and train others on basic principles of food safety. Among them are certainly preventing cross-contamination, monitoring kill steps, cleaning, sanitizing and science-based approach to processes. Strangely, more often than we realize, we seem to leave all that food safety mindset at work and make basic mistakes when we use our own kitchens. If that is not your case, then congratulations … but still most of us fall short on what we can do to bring awareness into our family or community to principles that should be implemented when we prepare food and cook.
Some weak habits that people are used to doing in the kitchen, most of the time are passed throughout generations and may be simple to change. One typical example of this is washing raw meat under the sink faucet. Washing or rinsing of raw meat is not recommended because bacteria can cross-contaminate other foods, utensils, and surfaces. Droplets have been shown to disperse up to 50 cm in front of a sink and 60 to 70 cm to either side of a sink where chicken was washed (Everis & Betts, 2003).
In a study published in August 2019, Food Safety Consumer Research Project: Meal Preparation Experiment Related to Poultry Washing (RTI International for USDA, FSIS, OPACE, Food Safety Education Staff) a control group washed the chicken 61% of the time. Meanwhile, participants who were informed that washing meat and poultry doesn’t destroy bacteria but spreads it, washed the chicken only 7% of the time.
WHY THE HOME-KITCHEN ?
Within a domestic environment, kitchens and bathrooms have high potential to function as “microbial incubators”, due to the continuous inoculation of new microbial cells, e.g. by food handling and direct body contact to domestic surfaces; the colonization success of these microbes then depends on the suitability of the environmental conditions, such as humidity and nutrient availability. Multiple use of the kitchen provides risky potential to introduce an array of pathogens which can contaminate foods, multiply and result in illness.
Thus, the need to focus on one of our favourite areas at home: The Kitchen.
As such … Love is in the Air and so is the Flu! So, wash your Hands properly.
Bacteria exist everywhere! They’re on you even now, and on the phone/tablet screen from which you probably are reading this article. Pervasive as they are, these “invisible” microbial life forms are (usually) nothing to fear. You require to just fine-tune your kitchen food handling practices and you can keep your food safe.
“Within one linear centimeter of your lower colon there lives and works more bacteria (about 100 billion) than all humans who have ever been born. Yet many people continue to assert that it is we who are in charge of the world” – Neil Degrasse Tyson
What do you think? Can you really eliminate most of the microbes in your house by only wiping down the counter surfaces, cutting boards, appliances and utensils with your soapy sponge or through the dishwasher appliance? The answer is No.