Are you storing leftovers wrong? There is nothing better than knowing you don’t have to cook the night after making a huge meal. Even better when you have had a crowd over and made some of your favorite dishes and know they will be better the next day.
Food safety experts say that wrapping food in aluminum foil for storage could lead to an infection of dangerous bacteria.
And even wrapping up your food correctly might not be enough to avoid food poisoning if you don’t take the proper precautions, they warned.
Most bacteria require an environment with plenty of oxygen in order to rapidly grow on your food.
Unlike safer options such as Tupperware containers and sealable bags, tinfoil doesn’t create an airtight seal around your food.
Dr Zachary Cartwright, a food scientist for Aqualab in Chicago, says this creates the perfect environment for dangerous pathogens.
‘Aluminum foil alone cannot create a completely airtight seal because it’s not inherently adhesive and [it] doesn’t conform perfectly to surfaces,’ Dr Cartwright told Southern Living.
Wrapping a leftover roast up in aluminum foil and putting it in the fridge might seem like a sensible enough storage method.
Yet, although aluminum foil is convenient for cooking or transporting a sandwich, it isn’t a safe option for cooked food.
Since foil can’t adhere to itself, no matter how tight you wrap it there will always be a way for air to get in and allow bacteria, fungi, and viruses to thrive.
Improperly stored food can become a breeding ground for bacteria like staphylococcus, the bacteria which causes the staph infection, which creates toxins that cause food poisoning.
Likewise, food might become home to Bacillus cerus which excretes a toxic mixture of chemicals that lead to vomiting, abdominal pain, and diarrhoea.
In even more severe cases, wrapping your food in aluminium foil could lead to infections of Clostridium botulinum, which causes botulism, and Listeria monocytogenes.
Although these bacteria are much rarer, they can lead to serious illness and even fatalities in vulnerable individuals.
For more tips on food safety and avoiding foodborne illness please keep an eye on Make Food Safe.
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