E. coli beef warning...

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perc-o-prince

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 23, 2005
Messages
5,199
Location
Southboro, Mass
Hey,

I'm a member of Southborough's Emergency Management Committee so I receive (usually) late-breaking news before it hits the mass media. I meant to post something when I saw the alert on Toll House Cookie Dough, but somehow forgot. Here's one I received just an hour ago.

If the general concensus is for me to not post these, let me know. Otherwise, I'll post them as I see them.

Chuck
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Multistate Outbreak of E. coli O157:H7 Infections Associated with Beef from JBS Swift Beef Company
Several state health departments, CDC, and the United States Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service (USDA-FSIS) are investigating a multi-state outbreak of Escherichia coli O157:H7 infections. On June 24, FSIS issued a notice about a recall of 41,280 pounds of beef products from JBS Swift Beef Company that may be contaminated with E. coli O157:H7. On June 28, the recall was expanded to include 380,000 pounds of assorted pieces of beef (beef primal products) from the same company. Health officials in several states who were investigating reports of E. coli O157:H7 illnesses found that most ill persons had consumed ground beef, and many reported that it was undercooked. At least some of the illnesses appear to be associated with products subject to these recalls. Samples from unopened packages of ground beef recovered from a patient's home were tested by the Michigan Public Health Laboratory yielded an E. coli O157:H7 isolate that matched the "DNA fingerprint" of the outbreak strain.
Twenty three persons infected with a strain of E. coli O157:H7 with a particular "DNA fingerprint" have been reported from 9 states. Of these, 17 have been confirmed by an advanced DNA test as having the outbreak strain; confirmatory tests are pending on others. The number of ill persons identified in each state is as follows: California (4), Maine (1), Michigan (6), Minnesota (1), New Hampshire (1), New Jersey (2), New Mexico (1), New York (1) and Wisconsin (6).
Most ill persons reported consumption of ground beef, and many reported that it was undercooked. Ground beef with the outbreak strain was obtained from the home of one person infected with that strain. The first reported illness began on April 2, 2009, and the last began on June 13, 2009. Among 17 ill persons for whom hospitalization status is known, 12 (70%) were hospitalized. Two patients developed a type of kidney failure called hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). No deaths have been reported. Of patients with available information, 14 (64%) were male and 59% are less than 19 years old (range 2 to 74 years).
Most of the beef packages in the first recall bear the establishment number "Est. 969" inside the USDA mark of inspection and have identifying package dates of "042109" or "042209." Consumers are urged to check their refrigerators and freezers for beef products produced by this firm and purchased on or after April 21, 2009 and discard or return the recalled beef products to the place of purchase for a refund. The pieces of beef (primal beef products) in the expanded recall were produced on April 21, 2009, and were distributed nationally and internationally. Boxes of these pieces of beef bear the establishment number "EST. 969" inside the USDA mark of inspection, the identifying package date of "042109," and a time stamp ranging from "0618" to "1130." These pieces of beef were sold to retail stores nationwide after April 21, 2009, and some was probably cut again or made into ground beef, then re-packaged, so packages purchased by consumers may not have identifying information. Customers with questions about the source of a package of beef should contact the place where they purchased it (e.g., grocery store, club store, or meat market).
More information on the recalled products can be found at:

Colorado Firm Expands Recall of Beef Products Due To Possible E. coli O157:H7 Contamination (June 24 recall)
Colorado Firm Expands Recall of Beef Products Due To Possible E. coli O157:H7 Contamination (June 28 recall)
Advice to Consumers
Cook Beef Thoroughly
Eat ground beef or ground beef patties that have been cooked to a safe internal temperature of 160° F.

Use a thermometer to measure the internal temperature—it is the only way to be sure ground beef is cooked to a high enough temperature to kill harmful bacteria.
Color is NOT a reliable indicator that ground beef or ground beef patties have been cooked to a temperature high enough to kill harmful bacteria such as E. coli O157:H7.
For more information go to Is It Done Yet? (USDA)*.

Refrigerate Meats
Refrigerate raw meat within two hours after purchase or within one hour if temperatures exceed 90° F.
Refrigerate cooked meat and poultry within two hours after cooking.
Consumers who have questions about the recalled products can contact USDA-FSIS at "Ask Karen" online at www.AskKaren.gov* or call the Meat and Poultry Hotline at 1-888-MPHotline (674-6854). Because any raw ground beef can contain disease-causing germs, CDC and USDA-FSIS encourage consumers to use good food safety practices and to heed the following advice:

To keep food safe, remember to Clean, Separate, Cook, and Chill. For more food safety information visit www.BeFoodSafe.gov*.

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Jeez...

You can't eat anything without there being something wrong with it.

Even your green vegetables are not safe.

I'm tired of hearing about tainted food!

Perhaps our dear 'president' could worry about what's going on here instead of sticking his nose into other countries' business....

~Tim
 
Never was much of a meat eater, especially with beef and pork (very hard on the digestive system). The warning is much appreciated though!!
 
"Perhaps our dear 'president' could worry about what's going on here instead of sticking his nose into other countries' business...."

If only....

Now is a critical time to put the USA first, instead of other countries. Probably will never happen, whether a pres is a repub, dem, conservative, or liberal :(
 
I Say Do Like Our Mothers and Grandmothers

Also even Alton Brown:

Grind your own beef and or make one's own sausage. It isn't that hard to do and one knows what one is getting and more important can control the sanitary aspect of things. Either that or find an old world butcher one can trust, such as those found in parts of Pittsburg.

There is a reason so many vintage mixers came with meat grinder and susage stuffing attachements.

L.
 
I feel quite lucky to be honest.

Our local supermarket has their own butchers shop inside so you can pretty much get any cut of meat....though they don't make their own sausages, they do mince their beef, lamb, veal and pork daily....

...and directly opposite the supermarket, we have a butcher that does everything including making his own jerky. If you buy a specific cut of meat from him but want it aged a couple of weeks, he'll even do that for free...
 

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