Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6288924 Food Microbiology 2012 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

The objectives of the present study were to evaluate the spread of Salmonella Enteritidis to different cutting boards (wood, triclosan-treated plastic, glass, and stainless steel) from contaminated poultry skin (5 log CFU/g) and then to tomatoes and to analyze the effect of different protocols used to clean these surfaces to control contamination. The following procedures were simulated: (1) no cleaning after handling contaminated poultry skin; (2) rinsing in running water; (3) cleaning with dish soap and mechanical scrubbing; and (4) cleaning with dish soap and mechanical scrubbing, followed by disinfection with hypochlorite. The pathogen was recovered from all surfaces following procedure 1, with counts ranging from 1.90 to 2.80 log, as well as from the tomatoes handled on it. Reduced numbers of S. Enteritidis were recovered using the other procedures, both from the surfaces and from the tomatoes. Counts were undetectable after procedure 4. From all surfaces evaluated, wood was the most difficult to clean, and stainless steel was the easiest. The use of hypochlorite as a disinfecting agent helped to reduce cross-contamination.

► Transfer of Salmonella to four types of cutting boards and cross-contamination to tomatoes. ► Cleaning procedures were evaluated with respect to decontamination of cutting boards. ► Wood was the most difficult to clean, and stainless steel was the easiest. ► Sanitization with sodium hypochlorite was the protocol that showed the best results.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
Authors
, , , , , ,