Chicken biryani is one of those
ubiquitous dishes immensely liked by most. The possibility of faecal
contamination — human or animal — in your favourite lunch order certainly
cannot be a relishable thought.
It thus comes as a shocker that five
out of six samples of chicken biryani, collected from across the State and
tested by the Food Quality Monitoring Laboratory at Konni, have been found to
be contaminated by high levels of E.coli bacteria.
The presence of E.coli in food is a
general indication of direct or indirect contamination by faecal matter and a
sure-fire indication of the poor hygiene practices of food handlers.
The results of the evaluation of
microbial quality of various ready-to-eat foods in Kerala, done by the
Konni-based Food Quality Monitoring Lab, was presented at a seminar on Safe
Food Business Practices, organised by the Commissionerate of Food Safety here
on recently.
The study, carried out between
September 2011 and May 2013, evaluated the microbial load in 44 ready-to-eat
food items from various food business operators across the State.
Of the 134 samples of food items
analysed, 22.38 per cent (30 samples) were found to have the presence of E.coli
bacteria above the tolerance limit.
E.coli is an organism which is
normally present in the intestinal tract of mammals and is thus a faecal
indicator organism. Its presence in ready-to-eat foods – fully cooked or raw
edible foods like salads – is an indication of poor hygiene and sanitation or
inadequate heat treatment.
The tolerance limit for E.coli is
less than 100 cfu/g for raw food and less than 10 cfu/g for cooked food.
Some of the popular food items
tested by the lab included green salads (all samples of which were contaminated
by E.coli), fish curry, chicken curry, parotta, puffs, pizza, vada, dosa,
sambar, chutney, among many other such items.
The samples were purchased from
hotels across Kerala, in packets provided by eateries, which were immediately
transferred to sterile polythene bags and to insulated chilled boxes and
transferred to lab immediately.
The researchers have pointed out
that poor sanitation is largely responsible for much of the contamination in
food from food handlers.
The levels of hygiene and sanitation
inside hotel kitchens is of prime importance because the presence of a toilet
near the hotel kitchen poses a serious risk of E.coli contamination in food
preparation.
Food handlers need to be made aware
of the importance of maintaining personal hygiene as well as hygienic habits.
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