Saturday, April 11, 2020

Safe Food in Lockdown

Are you tired of reading and hearing about COVID-19 yet?  Are you totally confined to your home, or are you an essential service worker?  How have things changed for you?

My on-line news service provides the ten top items each day as links.  For the last two weeks, nine out of the ten have been about COVID-19 and mostly they provide depressing reading.  I'm not going to rehash all that.

New Zealand, where I live, has closed its borders. 

The majority of shops are closed, so our food shopping is mostly confined to visits to the supermarket, which may involve long queues and limited numbers of people in the building at any time, so the on-line ordering and collection option is popular. The 2-metre separation rule is now being followed by most people.

How does this affect our eating habits?  Well, restaurants and fast food joints are closed, so we are all preparing many more meals at home from what we have on hand.  This may involve substitution of ingredients, or complete change of menu at short notice.  Not everyone is used to cooking meals at home and there may be a few disasters! 

Do we need to worry about contracting the virus from our food?  The best information I have is that this is a respiratory infection and you can't pick it up from food.  Since it is a virus, it can't replicate in stored food, so the only concern is with contamination of the packaging.  Survival time on surfaces seems to vary, but studies by CDC, researchers at various universities and FDA indicate that the survival time varies from a few hours to about three days, but it is important to remember that the AMOUNT of virus remaining may be as low as 0.01% of the original contamination.  It is unlikely that you can contract the virus from food packaging, but it's a good idea to wipe the packaging down with a 1:48 dilution of household 6% bleach, (5mL 6% bleach into 240mL water) or just leave the packages unopened for a few days.

So, do we need to change our cooking and eating habits?  Essentially, I think the answer is "No" but we do need to be very careful.  Nobody wants to waste food, so it's likely that leftovers will be stored for future use.  We don't want to burden our hospitals with food poisoning cases.  Here are a few tips:

Keep leftovers refrigerated and reheat to at least 75C - use a thermometer
Wash your hands thoroughly and frequently
Don't touch your face
Ensure that food is cooked properly (as you would normally) 
Be very wary of cross contamination of raw and cooked food
Stay home; don't pop down to the corner store just to pick up a bottle of milk - plan your shopping.

Just a couple of final points:
The experts now think that the wearing of masks available to the general public is not going to protect you from infection.  Don't forget that the virus is tiny and if you get it in your eyes, it will run down your tear ducts into your nasal passages and can initiate an infection

I am now washing my hands more thoroughly and frequently than when I was working with green lipped mussels deliberately infected with high levels of Salmonella!

2 comments:

John Brooks said...

Update: some experts are now saying that wearing high quality masks WILL protect you from infection. Some countries are mandating the wearing of facemasks, others are requiring non-medical masks to be worn on public transport. Certainly, the wearing of a facemask will protect others if you are infected but asymptomatic.

mr.sleep blog said...
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