|
Now We Know Why Spinach Salad
Is
Served With Bacon Dressing
Jim Prevor's Perishable
Pundit, October 30, 2006
How to minimize or prevent future outbreaks of E.
coli 0157:H7 is the great question vexing the industry. The truth is we
don’t know that much about E. coli. It is typically associated with
ruminant animals, but the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the
California Department of Health Services (CDHS) just announced that
they found E. coli 0157:H7 of the same strain that was in the spinach
bags and in the sick people in the digestive track of a wild pig, which
is a
monogastric animal, not a ruminant.
The pig was in a cow pasture adjacent to the
implicated spinach field and they noted both holes in the fences around
the spinach fields and tracks across the spinach field.
Although they have found the same strain of E.coli
in a stream and in fecal material on the same ranch, right now they are
focused on wild pigs as they both have the E. coli strain and a
plausible method of contaminating the spinach field.
It is worth emphasizing that this is still just a
theory, and they have found ZERO on the actual spinach field. In fact,
here is a PR lesson for the industry. If you are going to use a portion
of a ranch for fresh product and a portion for some other use, make sure
you split up the land ownership into two separate companies. This way
the government and the media would be unable to say that they have found
something on the ranch where the spinach was grown.
In fact, the topography of this field seems to lay
ruin to everyone’s various theories about the whole thing. There was a
big article in The New York Times, which we linked to as part of
one of our
pundit Mailbags. The Times article theorized that this whole problem
was caused by cattle being grain fed. However, the cattle where we are
finding the E. coli 0157:H7 next to the implicated spinach field was
pasture-raised cattle.
The same
pundit Mailbag dealt with water leaking down on a field, which is
another favorite theory but, in the actual implicated field, the spinach
was on a kind of plateau over pasture,
riparian land and a stream. In other words, nothing could drain down
onto the spinach.
At this point we know that the testing that CDHS
and FDA have done has resulted in nine
isolates of E.coli 0157:H7 of the subject strain on one of the four
implicated ranches. Though they have found E. coli 0157:H7 on other
implicated ranches, it has not matched the strain found in the outbreak.
But how the E. coli got to the spinach fields, how
it got on the spinach, why it wasn’t washed off in the processing —
these are really unknowns. Is it is possible for spinach to absorb it
through the roots? We don’t know. Is it possible that it adheres to the
surface in such a way that it simply cannot be washed off? We don’t
know.
It is a very good thing that PMA has appropriated
$1 million for a food safety
initiative, because we need to jump start some research on these
questions. Hopefully we can use the PMA money, as well as more that
Western Growers Association will raise in a public/private partnership
with money from the state of California and the federal government, to
really improve the science here.
Improved science possibly will lead to better
processing solutions so that any pathogen can be removed with greater
certainty.
In the meantime, however, we are looking for
practical ways to minimize contamination of foods designed to be
consumed raw. It is not an easy thing to do because, as we discussed in
our review of the
Spinach Town Hall Meeting, things can always be made safer and the
regulatory agencies give precious little guidance as to what kind of
tradeoff is acceptable between keeping food economical for consumers.
Still the dilemma is that the industry does not
have the luxury of waiting for either perfect knowledge or perfect
guidance from regulators. Pundit sister publication PRODUCE BUSINESS,
along with Sunkist and Sun Sweet, sponsored famous San Francisco 49ers
Quarterback Steve Young to speak at a breakfast on Tuesday morning of
the PMA convention. He provided an example of how his football career
could guide business decisions.
Steve Young explained that being relatively small,
compared to the massive guys that surrounded him, he often couldn’t see
where his receiver actually was. So he had to develop the instinct of
being able to throw the ball blind to the spot where the receiver was
going to be.
In light of the limits of our knowledge of E. coli
and the urgent need to act, so we too must develop the instinct of
projecting where the science and the regulators are going to wind up and
take action to bring the industry to that position now.
|