Cynthia wrote:
Evil Ronnie wrote:
Maestroken wrote:
I long since gave up produce bags a while ago. Why does my broccoli need to be in it's own individual plastic bag before being put into another bag to be carried home. Does the broccoli go bad if it touches the cucumber during the five minute drive home?
Maestroken,
If the person in front of you in the checkout line purchased chicken or meat, chances are the conveyor belt is teeming with bacteria from a dripping wet plastic wrapped tray. . Salmonella...you name it. I'd rather have
my broccoli or bananas in a bag, thank you.
I almost never use plastic bags for produce, and I've never gotten salmonella from the conveyor belt -- but then, I avoid putting my food down on wet spots. I just can't bring myself to waste even more plastic.
Cynthia,
How do you know that you (or your friends & family) have never gotten sick from a conveyer belt or a shopping cart that your groceries have been in contact with? How also do you know that the dry spots are safe?
This article from Snopes is enough for me.
Snopes wrote:
According to a four-year study conducted by the University of Arizona's Environmental Research Lab and sponsored by Clorox, grocery carts are veritable petri dishes teeming with human saliva, mucus, urine, fecal matter, as well as the blood and juices from raw meat. Swabs taken from the handles and child seats of 36 grocery carts in San Francisco, Chicago, Tucson, and Tampa showed these common surfaces to rank third on the list of nastiest public items to touch, with only playground equipment and the armrests on public transportation producing more disgusting results. In terms of playing host to germs and bacteria, the carts are far worse than public bathrooms, which at least are cleaned more often. Bacteria and viruses such as E.coli, staphylococcus, salmonella, and influenza can live on grocery carts, a sorry fact most shoppers are blissfully unaware of.
I'll continue to use produce bags, thank you very much.
I do get frustrated trying to open those bags, especially the Jewel bags, however. Wetting my fingers is not as effective with the Jewel bags as it is with others. I end up destroying several of them until I finally get air inside the bag. Maybe someday someone will invent a way to open them easily. Until then maybe they should supply pine tar.