Episode 10 starts out with a discussion of Christmas gifts for the food safety nerd. Neither Don or Ben actually recieved any. The guys move on to discussion temperature abuse (surprise), data loggers and the nuances of infectious dose. Raw milk and home food preservation also make an appearance. Creative Don ends things with a food safety haiku.
- What Ben did not get for Christmas.
- Ben has a tumblr, AKA pinterest for nerds. So does Don.
- Thermometer of champions. Comark PDT300.
- Bill Keene, Oregon's top food-borne illness detective.
- Don's extra nerdy gift "from me, to me; because I always know what I want" - the iGrill.
- Thermometers (here, here) that Don is using in a project to assess transport temperatures/variations.
- Not sure why, but Don says he has to do this to get the data.
- Someone who probably needs to use a temperature control monitor.
- What Don saw outside a restaurant in San Diego.
- Three things that are really important in real estate.
- Don used fake clams to model Vibrio growth. What do fake clams look like (1,2)?
- Is this the edge that Don was talking about? Because, ironically, Ben is "always on the Edge" as this is his favorite radio station (or internet radio station).
- Always start blog posts with a number.
- Mike Batz, our diehard listener who Don Schaffner may or may not be posting as, and who co-authored this, bought himself a bunch of date stickers for Christmas. He's clairvoyant.
- Cronobacter sakazakii, which used to be known as Enterobacter sakazakii (pronounced sakazak-ee - or coronobacter sakazaki-eye, we're not sure which one).
- Wal-mart recalls Enfamil formula.
- FDA visits the plant and finds nothing; CDC epidemiologists also says the outbreak is not related to Enfimil.
- Lettuce recalled because of Salmonella in an adjacent field.
- Salmonella?
- Raw milk at Rutgers University.
- Where you can buy space booties.
- How Good is Your Eyesight: Bill Marler's description of infectious dose. Don says it's one - it's the mean infectious dose that really matters though.
- What Don looks like when he goes all mathy.
- What Ben looks like.
- What 1000 servings of eggs might look like.
- Pathogenesis of Shigella dysenteriae 1 (Shiga) Dysentery - prisoners used for dose-response models.
- Dose-Response Model for Listeria monocytogenes-Induced Stillbirths in Nonhuman Primates.
- Christine Moe, Emory University - who does dose-response work in norovirus.
- Tested recipe for home canned apple sauce.
- Should home canned foods be boiled for 10 min before consumption? USDA still says yes, but in their canning guide, only for low-acid.
- Safety of herbed oils paper.
- Wash your hands, dumbass.