Anonymous wrote:You just need to go over the entire surface while applying a little pressure with your fingers when rinsing fruits and veggies with water. For soft produce (raspberries, lettuce, etc), you apply the pressure you can without squashing them. A lot of people just submerge their heads of lettuce in a big bowl of water - it lifts most bacteria off the leaves. No special equipment and chemicals necessary.
If you’re pregnant or severely immunocompromised, then stronger measures might be necessary, and you don’t want to eat raw foods in a restaurant.
- microbiologist.
Anonymous wrote:….what??
— rinses produce with potable drinking water, not dead yet
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"baby lettuce" is one of the easiest and cheapest things to grow. They don't even need a grow light in summer; just put them by a window.
If you're this concerned about washing produce, maybe try growing some of your own?
This is silly. You aren't growing a year's supply of lettuce without major effort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I rarely ever rinse my produce. Not dead yet.
I had no idea I was supposed to rinse lettuce. I just remove the outer leaves and cut up the inner ones.
That works for iceberg but for romaine or leaf lettuce? You're eating bugs and dirt, especially if you buy organic.
Anonymous wrote:I rarely ever rinse my produce. Not dead yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I rarely ever rinse my produce. Not dead yet.
I had no idea I was supposed to rinse lettuce. I just remove the outer leaves and cut up the inner ones.
Anonymous wrote:It was a real article in the paper. OP here. I never used vinegar or salt or anything. Daunting to think of all that taking each leaf apart...
Anonymous wrote:Yes. I use either white vinegar or salt, which also works. I rinse until water is clear, which is several rinses. I get a lot of our produce from a local organic farm, but it’s often right from the field and dirty.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/guides/how-to-clean-produce/
Yikes. How much time and running water is this all taking? Plus the vinegar, cleanup...
Those prewashed bagged salads had e coli once iirc.
I just eat cooked vegetables.
Salads used to be nice but taking the wilted lettuce to be composted and their use as blue cheese dressing carrier for DH, eh.
DO YOU DO ALL THIS?
Anonymous wrote:I just give everyone a quick rinse. What’s the big deal? I sometimes buy the pre washed arugula or baby kale…there seems to be less e. Coli risk is you are buying a bag of one item, not the mixed salads/vegetables/sprig mix, and no spinach.