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Tech researcher’s mixture reduces E. coli, salmonella

By Salmonella Lawyer on April 21, 2006

Consumers soon should be able to buy beef and poultry products that have an added level of safety against two sometimes fatal sources of food poisoning.

Mindy Brashear, a researcher at Texas Tech University applied a mixture of four different lactic acid bacterium to ground beef and found the combination reduced the presence of salmonella and a harmful E. coli strain by as much as 99.99 percent. Brashears said the mixture is the first post-production treatment that continues to work. It was effective for up to 60 days in frozen ground beef and about a week in refrigerated beef, Brashears said.

The FDA said the mixture was safe for beef and poultry products. It isn’t known when the treated meat carrying special labels will hit the market, and basic food safety practices won’t change.

The study also showed the mixture doesn’t affect how meat tastes.

The mixture will be marketed by Indianapolis-based Nutrition Physiology Corp.

  • Posted in:
    Food, Drug & Agriculture, Personal Injury
  • Blog:
    Salmonella Blog
  • Organization:
    Marler Clark, Inc., PS
  • Article: View Original Source

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