Gulf Today - Panorama

Seemingly harmless habits

SOMETHING AS SIMPLE AS HOLDING A MENU OR BLOWING OUT YOUR BIRTHDAY CANDLES CAN BE A SOURCE OF BACTERIA TRANSFER

- By Susan Ardis

Over the course of three decades, food scientist and professor at Clemson University Paul Dawson has studied how common food habits may increase the spread of bacteria in the human system.

According to a report by CNN, every year, Dawson and his group of undergradu­ate and graduate students come up with a research project related to food habits and then quantify how dirty it actually is.

While most people don’t get ill from the small amounts of bacteria normally found in food, or transferre­d during the basic handling of food, how many of these “six dirty habits” are you guilty of?

The 5-second rule

Just about everyone does this: A cookie or piece of candy — or a sandwich — drops to the floor. Pick it up within five seconds and it’s still good to eat. Right? Well … maybe. It depends on the type of food, the type of surface and the type and amount of bacteria. Solid foods dropped on a clean-looking solid or hard surface don’t transfer too much bacteria to be harmful. But wet foods on a surface like a carpeted floor? … Nope.

Double dipping

If you’ve ever seen someone take a bite of a chip and then dip that chip back into a bowl of dip, that’s called double dipping. Dawson and his group tested the amount of bacteria transfer present when chips are double dipped into three common types of dip: salsa, melted chocolate and queso cheese.

Once again, depending on the type of dip, much higher bacterial population­s were found after double dipping. While there was some minimal bacterial transfer in the melted chocolate and queso — there was five times as much transfer in the salsa. The theory is that chips that have been bitten and dipped in salsa may not hold all of the salsa, and bits of salsa falling back

into the bowl carry the mouth’s bacteria with it.

Sharing popcorn at the movies

OK, this one is actually not so bad. After Dawson and his group spread non-infectious E. coli bacteria on the hands of their subjects and had them share a bowl of popcorn, they found that the transfer rate was minimal — less than 1 per cent increase.

Water with lemon (or any other fruit)

You sit down at a restaurant and the waitperson brings you a glass of water. You ask for a slice of lemon to go with it. Dawson tested the rate of bacterial transfer between hands and ice scoops with slices of wet and dry lemons. Test participan­ts coated their hands and ice scoops with noninfecti­ous E. coli and then scooped ice and handled the lemon slices. One hundred per cent of the bacteria were transferre­d to the wet lemon slices while only 30 per cent was transferre­d to the dry slices. On average, 19 per cent of the bacteria on the hands were transferre­d to the ice, while 66 per cent of the bacteria on the scoop were transferre­d.

Blowing out birthday candles on a cake

“The amount of bacteria varies a lot from person to person based on how sloppy someone is when blowing their candles out, but it does occur,” Dawson said. According to Dawson’s research, blowing out candles over icing resulted in an increase of 1,400 per cent, or 15 times more, bacteria recovered from icing compared to icing that did not have candles blown out. So maybe have the cake, just scrape off the icing.

Menu, please

Usually, the first thing a diner is handed after being seated is the restaurant’s menu. Before you freak out, remember that small amounts of bacteria are not harmful and occur naturally. But Dawson and his group found that bacteria are transferre­d just by handling menus. Higher traffic in restaurant­s during peak times produced higher numbers of bacteria. Overall, Dawson says that day-to-day, if you keep a clean kitchen and observe basic levels of cleanlines­s and hygiene, there shouldn’t be a problem with a little bacteria.

“These studies are not really big foodsafety issues, but they’re interestin­g and fun. I hope they do make people aware of good hygiene,” he said. “But I don’t want anyone to be a germophobe about it.”

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