Easy disinfection of green leafies now possible

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tastefoodblog.com.jpg(thehimalayantimes)
NEW YORK: Scientists have reported a new, easy-to-implement method to  disinfect green leafy vegetables like spinach to reduce outbreaks of illness.
Leafy vegetables are washed by commercial processes before they head to the  grocery store.   “But these methods, which can include water and bleach rinses or irradiation,  are not completely effective,” says Nichola Kinsinger from University of  California-Riverside.
Scientists have estimated that 99 per cent of food-borne illnesses from leafy  greens can be traced back to disinfection issues.
As a result, the team has developed a different approach to attacking the  bacteria, most notably E. coli, which is the cause of many outbreaks.
Using a parallel-plate flow chamber system that Walker developed, the  researchers tested the real-time attachment and detachment of bacteria to the  outer layer of spinach leaves.
At low-bleach concentrations, the bacteria fell off the leaves but remained  alive.  At the higher concentrations used commercially, however, all of the bacteria  were killed.
“We found that because of the topology of the spinach leaf, nearly 15 per  cent of the surface may ‘see’ a bleach concentration that is 1,000-times less  than that of the rinse solution,” Kinsinger noted.
In some cases, that translated to a 90 per cent bacterial survival in their  tests and a high risk for cross contamination.  To reduce that risk, the researchers are optimising an inexpensive titanium  dioxide (TiO2) photocatalyst that companies could add to the rinse water or use  to coat equipment surfaces that come into contact with the leaves as they are  processed.
When TiO2 absorbs light, it produces a strong oxidant that kills bacteria  completely.  The team presented their work at the national meeting and exposition of the  American Chemical Society (ACS) in Boston recently.
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