Healthy Eating Advice Spanish Fork UT

Correspondent Lea Thompson pointed out that 6 million bags of salad are sold each day. Most of us believe they’re ready to eat, without having to wash the greens—especially if you buy them in an organic food store. But officials are concerned about lettuce safety, and it has little to do with the pesticides and fertilizers that worry organic consumers.

Syracuse Farmers Market
(801) 825-3633
1891 West 1700 South; Syracuse Museum and Cultural Center
Syracuse, UT
Spanish Fork Farmers Market
(801) 804-4530
City Center 40 South Main St. parking lot
Spanish Fork, UT
Jacob's Cove Heritage Farm
(888) 880-8039
Orem, UT
Herb Shop Connection
(801) 489-8797?
1195 Spring Creek Pl
Springville, UT
Good Earth Natural Foods Market
(801) 765-1616
500 S State
Orem, UT
Roberts Ranch & Gardens
(801) 836-0232
Spanish Fork, UT
Provo's Farmers Market
(801) 542-9382
500 West 100 South
Provo, UT
Lindon Farmers Market
(801) 785-7981
60 N. State Street; across from the City Center
Lindon, UT
Good Earth Natural Foods
(801) 375-7444?
1045 S University Av
Provo, UT
True Foods Market
(801) 426-0646?
192 W 1480 S
Orem, UT
Data Provided by:
 
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Bagged Salad Risks (Part 2)

Yesterday, I alerted you to a Dateline NBC report on the safety of bagged salads. (Please click here so you have the background information.)

Correspondent Lea Thompson pointed out that 6 million bags of salad are sold each day. Most of us believe they’re ready to eat, without having to wash the greens—especially if you buy them in an organic food store. But officials are concerned about lettuce safety, and it has little to do with the pesticides and fertilizers that worry organic consumers.

“Over the last five years or so, we have noticed a real increase in the number of [E. coli] outbreaks that were traced back to fresh produce,” Dr. Robert Brackett, the FDA’s head of food safety, told Thompson. There are many sources for potential infection: the fields in which lettuce is grown, the bathroom habits of workers who handle produce and conditions in processing/shipping plants. Chopped lettuce, in particular, may be more vulnerable to contamination because of the way it’s prepared for packaging.

Experts suspect E. coli outbreaks are most often the result of farm or creek water that has been contaminated with animal feces. According to Thompson, “scientists believe E. coli bacteria might have been absorbed by the lettuce plant’s root system. If that happens, washing the lettuce won’t do any good—the E. coli is already growing inside.” 

The United Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Association, not surprisingly, dismisses this as unproven speculation, pointing the finger i...

Click here to read the rest of "Bagged Salad Risks: Part 2"