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Nine things this top food safety lawyer won't eat at home or in a restaurant
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Nine things this top food safety lawyer won't eat at home or in a restaurant

  • Sep 6, 2018
  • Sep 6, 2018 Updated Oct 8, 2018
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In 25 years as a food safety attorney, Bill Marler's seen how the sausage is made — and what happens when things go wrong.

Intro

Intro

In 25 years as a food safety attorney, food safety attorney Bill Marler's seen how the sausage — and soup, salad, steak, etc. — is made and what happens when things go wrong (many Marler Clark clients' cases involved hospitalization or death from food-borne illness).

Upon request, Marler recently emailed the Miami Herald the list of foods you won't see on his table.

—David J. Neal of the Miami Herald

Dreamstime

'Raw' juice or milk

'Raw' juice or milk

Unpasteurized milk or juice is also called "raw milk" and "raw juice." "Raw milk directly from a cow can be infected with all types of bacteria," Marler said. "Some argue that milk loses nutrients during pasteurization, but this is patently false. Skipping pasteurization means an increased risk of contamination by bacteria, viruses, and parasites." (Dreamstime/TNS)

Dreamstime

Raw sprouts

Raw sprouts

"Raw sprouts are dangerous because of their growing process. The seeds are sprouted in standing water that can grow bacteria. There have been too many outbreaks to not pay attention to the risk of sprout contamination." Seven outbreaks — four salmonella, two E. coli, one listeria — since 2014 trace back to sprouts, according to the Centers for Disease Control. (Dreamstime/TNS)

Dreamstime

Meat that isn't well done

Meat that isn't well done

Steak connoisseurs will wail. Chefs might rend garments. But Marler got his start in the food safety niche working for plaintiffs whose children died in the 1993 Jack in the Box E. coli outbreak. So he has no problem insisting, "Meat needs to be cooked to 160 degrees throughout to kill bacteria that could cause E. coli or salmonella." (Dreamstime/TNS)

Dreamstime

Packaged salads

Packaged salads

The outbreak record speaks for itself: 79 outbreaks in the last 23 years, the most recent being this spring's romaine lettuce E. coli outbreak that sickened 197 people and killed five. That was the biggest E. coli outbreak of any kind in the United States since the 2006 leafy spinach outbreak that infected 199. In answering why romaine lettuce was involved in so many outbreaks, the FDA's Dr. Stic Harris probably covered lettuce and salads in general when he said, "It's not something that's cooked. There is no kill step (for the bacteria)." (Dreamstime/TNS)

Dreamstime

Pre-cut fruit

Pre-cut fruit

Your grocery might pre-cut the fruit in the back. Or, it might get pre-cut fruit from a plant in another state, such as the retailers in the current pre-cut salmonella outbreak that traces back to Caito Foods' Indianapolis plant. Either way, Marler says, "The convenience is nice, but the more people handling, and processing food means more chances for contamination." (Dreamstime/TNS)

Dreamstime

Raw and undercooked eggs

Raw and undercooked eggs

"Raw and undercooked eggs can carry salmonella," Marler said. "Although it is much safer now than in the '80s and '90s, it is not worth the risk." (Dreamstime/TNS)

Dreamstime

Raw or undercooked eggs

Raw or undercooked eggs

It should be noted that this spring's shell-egg salmonella outbreak mushroomed not from problems in home preparation, but problems at Rose Acre Farms' Hyde County, North Carolina, facility. Among those problems: butt-scratching. (Dreamstime/TNS)

Dreamstime

Raw shellfish, especially raw oysters

Raw shellfish, especially raw oysters

"Food-borne illness linked to shellfish has increased dramatically in the past five years because of global warming," Marler says. "Warmer water increases microbial growth, which ends up in filter feeders such as oysters." (Dreamstime/TNS)

Dreamstime

Raw water

Raw water

Marler says "unfiltered water can contain animal feces, Giardia, and any number of bacteria. You never know what is upstream." (Dreamstime/TNS)

Dreamstime

Uncooked flour

Uncooked flour

Marler says, "Uncooked flour can spread bacteria such as E. coli. In 2015 and 2016, 56 people developed E. coli infections from eating uncooked flour." (Dreamstime/TNS)

Dreamstime

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Free coffee today at Tucson's Dutch Bros. grand opening

Free coffee today at Tucson's Dutch Bros. grand opening

Oregon company's first Tucson store on South Wilmot Road is giving away free 16-ounce drinks throughout the day Tuesday, Oct. 9. 

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