Green onions cause about five percent of outbreaks of food
poisoning from produce, worldwide. Now a team of researchers from the
University of Delaware, Newark, shows that high pressure treatment of green
onions can kill various strains of Escherichia
coli O157:H7, and Salmonella enterica,
two major sources of food poisoning. Unlike heating, the pressure treatment
preserves the produce’s gustatory attributes. The research is published in the
March Applied and Environmental
Microbiology.
In the study, the researchers cultivated green onions both
in soil and hydroponically, irrigating each with different mixtures of the
pathogen strains. The researchers verified that the microbes were taken up by
the plants, into their roots, bulbs, stems, and leaves, says corresponding
author Haiqiang Chen.
The researchers then grew green onions hydroponically, in
water contaminated with the pathogens, for 15 days. At the end of this period,
the plants were harvested and placed in a laboratory version of a commercial
pressurizer for two minutes, at up to 5,000 times atmospheric pressure, at 20
or 40 degrees centigrade. In most cases, the pathogens were eradicated by this
treatment. “To our knowledge, this is the first research to demonstrate that
high pressure processing can kill foodborne pathogens internalized in green
onions,” says Chen.
In 2003, an outbreak of hepatitis associated with green
onions consumed at a restaurant in Monaca, PA, sickened more than 550 people,
killing at least three, according to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, and numerous outbreaks of Salmonella and E. coli O157:H7 have been linked to fresh produce.
(H. Neetoo, Y. Lu, C. Wu, and H. Chen. Use of high hydrostatic
pressure to inactivate Escherichia coli
0157:H7 and Salmonella enterica internalized
within and adhered to preharvest contaminated green onions. Appl. Environ.
Microbiol. 78:2063-2065.)
Download a PDF of the journal article at: http://bit.ly/asm0312a

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