Fast-food ice dirtier than their toilets
Ice cubes used by fast-food giants KFC, McDonald's and Guangzhou-based Kungfu at branches in Beijing contained bacteria far in excess of the national limit, according to China Central Television.
Some were even dirtier than toilet bowl water, CCTV said
The three fast-food operators said they were carrying out inspections and enhancing disinfection at the stores involved.
CCTV reporters sent ice cubes from the Chongwenmen outlets of KFC, McDonald's and Kungfu for lab tests. The KFC ice cubes were 20 times the limit, and 13 times higher than water samples taken from toilet bowls.
The amount of bacterial colonies found at McDonald's and Kungfu ice cubes reached 120 CFU and 900 CFU (colony-forming units) per milliliter respectively, exceeding the national limit of 100 per milliliter.
The CFU level of Kungfu's ice cubes was six times higher than toilet water, CCTV reported.
The intake of food with excessive level of colonies could lead to dysentery and diarrhea, said Ding Ke, an associate professor of food science and engineering of the Beijing University of Agriculture.
Wu Jing, a doctor at Beijing Shijitan Hospital, said excessive amount of colonies meant a higher chance of pathogenic bacteria and may make food rotten and stale.
Dirty ice machines and a poor awareness of food safety such as the importance of washing hands and poor sterilization procedures are some of the reasons that may lead to high level of bacterial colonies, experts said.
The CCTV report has been reposted more than 99,000 times on Sina Weibo since Saturday.
Nancy Han, a Shanghai resident who works at an education training center, said she would be telling KFC and McDonald's not to put ice cubes in her drinks. "It is so disgusting," she said.
KFC apologized yesterday, saying it had asked the Chongwenmen store to sterilize ice-making machines and relevant facilities strictly, while McDonald's said it had conducted checks on equipment used to make ice cubes and operation procedures. Kungfu said it had ordered the outlet to double disinfect its ice-making machines.
The Shanghai Food Safety Office said yesterday it had not found any excess bacteria in ice cubes served at local restaurants.
In June, the Daily Mail reported that the ice served in six out of 10 of Britain's most popular high street restaurants contained more bacteria than the water found in their toilets.
Tests showed that ice from branches of McDonald's, Burger King, KFC, Starbucks, Cafe Rouge and Nando's all had higher levels of bacteria than samples of water taken from their lavatory bowls, it reported. Experts say it could be due to them being cleaned more often.
Some were even dirtier than toilet bowl water, CCTV said
The three fast-food operators said they were carrying out inspections and enhancing disinfection at the stores involved.
CCTV reporters sent ice cubes from the Chongwenmen outlets of KFC, McDonald's and Kungfu for lab tests. The KFC ice cubes were 20 times the limit, and 13 times higher than water samples taken from toilet bowls.
The amount of bacterial colonies found at McDonald's and Kungfu ice cubes reached 120 CFU and 900 CFU (colony-forming units) per milliliter respectively, exceeding the national limit of 100 per milliliter.
The CFU level of Kungfu's ice cubes was six times higher than toilet water, CCTV reported.
The intake of food with excessive level of colonies could lead to dysentery and diarrhea, said Ding Ke, an associate professor of food science and engineering of the Beijing University of Agriculture.
Wu Jing, a doctor at Beijing Shijitan Hospital, said excessive amount of colonies meant a higher chance of pathogenic bacteria and may make food rotten and stale.
Dirty ice machines and a poor awareness of food safety such as the importance of washing hands and poor sterilization procedures are some of the reasons that may lead to high level of bacterial colonies, experts said.
The CCTV report has been reposted more than 99,000 times on Sina Weibo since Saturday.
Nancy Han, a Shanghai resident who works at an education training center, said she would be telling KFC and McDonald's not to put ice cubes in her drinks. "It is so disgusting," she said.
KFC apologized yesterday, saying it had asked the Chongwenmen store to sterilize ice-making machines and relevant facilities strictly, while McDonald's said it had conducted checks on equipment used to make ice cubes and operation procedures. Kungfu said it had ordered the outlet to double disinfect its ice-making machines.
The Shanghai Food Safety Office said yesterday it had not found any excess bacteria in ice cubes served at local restaurants.
In June, the Daily Mail reported that the ice served in six out of 10 of Britain's most popular high street restaurants contained more bacteria than the water found in their toilets.
Tests showed that ice from branches of McDonald's, Burger King, KFC, Starbucks, Cafe Rouge and Nando's all had higher levels of bacteria than samples of water taken from their lavatory bowls, it reported. Experts say it could be due to them being cleaned more often.
- About Us
- |
- Terms of Use
- |
-
RSS
- |
- Privacy Policy
- |
- Contact Us
- |
- Shanghai Call Center: 962288
- |
- Tip-off hotline: 52920043
- 沪ICP证:沪ICP备05050403号-1
- |
- 互联网新闻信息服务许可证:31120180004
- |
- 网络视听许可证:0909346
- |
- 广播电视节目制作许可证:沪字第354号
- |
- 增值电信业务经营许可证:沪B2-20120012
Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.