Times Colonist

Romaine ‘particular­ly susceptibl­e’ to E. coli

- ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

Grocery stores have pulled romaine lettuce off their shelves and many restaurant­s have stopped serving caesar salads after the leafy green has been linked to an E. coli outbreak for the third time in about a year.

The lettuce is more susceptibl­e to E. coli contaminat­ion partly because of how it’s grown, experts say, and its increasing­ly tarnished image could shake consumer confidence into not buying the salad green even after non-contaminat­ed produce appears on store shelves and restaurant tables again.

“Romaine lettuce is particular­ly susceptibl­e,” said Keith Warriner, a University of Guelph professor. “In our own research, what we found is that E. coli likes romaine lettuce out of all the other lettuces we have.”

Of the 22 confirmed cases of E. coli illness investigat­ed in Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick as of this week, the sick range from five to 93 years old and most reported eating romaine lettuce before experienci­ng symptoms.

People living in those provinces should avoid eating romaine lettuce for now, the Public Health Agency of Canada said in a public health notice. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency said Friday it has tested more than 2,000 samples of fresh lettuce and packaged salads looking for the source of an E. coli outbreak, but hasn’t found any produce that contains the bacteria.

In the U.S., the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ordered retailers and restaurant­s to stop selling the product. The strain infected 32 people across 11 states, according to the agency.

Warriner conducted a study that showed romaine lettuce extracts prompted E. coli out of a dormant state, which it can remain in for about a year in soil, and allowed it to flourish.

Romaine’s increased susceptibi­lity comes down to several factors, he said.

The crop is mostly grown in Arizona and California, Warriner said, which is also cattle country. Irrigation water used on romaine fields can become tainted with bacteria from the animals.

It doesn’t help that both states are quite hot and romaine lettuce already requires an abundance of water, he said.

Certainly, other crops such as spinach and kale are also grown in those areas under similar conditions, however those leaves are “tough as nails,” he said, and can better withstand damage.

The centralize­d production also means if an outbreak occurs, it becomes widespread, as the product is sent all over Canada and the U.S., he said.

Finally, washing lettuce at home doesn’t do anything, said Warriner, and “more likely re-contaminat­es than de-contaminat­es it.” Not to mention, the product is consumed raw, meaning cooking can’t kill off any bacteria.

Recalls cause a lot of mistrust in consumer confidence in the food chain, said Katy Jones, chief marketing officer at North Carolina-based FoodLogiQ.

The company offers technology that helps companies in the food industry track their supply chain and respond to recalls effectivel­y.

Some consumers complained on Twitter about consistent­ly being told to throw out pricey packages of products containing romaine.

Others said they’ve long since stopped buying the lettuce variety.

It’s reminiscen­t of a 2006 E. coli outbreak linked to spinach, Jones said. In the U.S., 199 people were infected and three died, according to the CDC. Canada had at least one confirmed case.

Some have speculated that incident led consumers to shun spinach in favour of kale, she said.

The so-called superfood saw a meteoric rise, with kale-devoted cookbooks containing recipes for chips and caesar salads made with kale, bringing the food into the mainstream.

But consumers tend to continue buying from companies that handle such recalls well, Jones said, meaning honestly and responsibl­y.

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