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Food Adulteration A Brief History

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Title: Food Adulteration A Brief History


1
Food Adulteration A Brief History
  • Abbas Lalljee
  • www.abbaslalljee.co.uk

2
Aims
  • The meaning of Food Adulteration
  • How serious was it?
  • Some examples of adulterated foods
  • How food was adulterated
  • An explanation of the legislation introduced

3
What is Adulteration?
  • To adulterate is defined as to make impure by
    addition which thus leads to adulteration.
  • In relation to food, we can take this to mean
    the addition of foreign substances, being
    contaminated by chemicals, or befouled by animal
    and human excrement

4
!! Historical Note !!
  • Throughout history food has been subject to
    adulteration.
  • Henry VIII cherished saffron so much that he
    condemned saffron adulterers to death

5
Fredrick Accums 1820 Book
6
Exposé.
  • The book was titled "A Treatise on Adulterations
    of Food and Culinary Poisons".
  • The book included a reference to 2 Kings Chapter
    IV Verse 40. - "There is Death in the Pot", a
    reference to the fact that the food being
    consumed could not be eaten.

7
Exposé.
  • Other chemists took up the challenge.
  • In the second half of the 19th century
    legislation in the UK established the statutory
    appointment of
  • Public Analysts.

8
Adulteration..
  • The deliberate adulteration of food was a common
    and, until 1860, virtually unrestricted practice.
  • For example, because of the Englishman's dislike
    for brown bread, bakers regularly whitened their
    flour with alum.
  • Conditions for the processing and sale of foods
    were unsanitary.

9
Adulteration..
  • An 1863 report to the Privy Council stated that
    one-fifth of the meat sold came from diseased
    cattle.
  • In 1860 the first pure-food act was passed, but,
    as was often the case in these early regulatory
    measures, it provided no mandatory system of
    enforcement.
  • In 1872 another act was passed, this time
    considerably strengthening penalties and
    inspection procedures.

10
Adulteration.
  • The Sale of Foods and Drugs Act of 1875 prevented
    the addition of harmful ingredients, such as
    poisonous chemicals and dyes, to foods and drugs.
  • The act also allowed medical officers to inspect
    foods.

11
Adulteration
  • Throughout most of the nineteenth century,
    Britons had little protection against unwholesome
    food and drink.
  • Many tons of adulterated tea, rancid butter and
    polluted meat were sold throughout the United
    Kingdom.

12
Adulteration
  • At this time bacterial contamination was not
    understood.
  • The chief concerns were visible gross
    contamination and decomposition.

13
Foods that were Adulterated
  • pepper - gravel, leaves and twigs added
  • tea - exhausted tea leaves and other leaves added
    and glazed with black lead
  • bread - grit, sand, ashes and mashed potato were
    added and alum used for bleaching.

14
Foods that were Adulterated
  • rum and beer - strychnine, cocculus inculus (both
    are hallucinogens) and copperas were added
  • pickles, bottled fruit, wine, and preserves -
    sulphate of copper added
  • mustard - lead chromate
  • chinese tea - ferric ferrocynanide, lime
    sulphate, and turmeric

15
Foods that were Adulterated
  • copper carbonate, lead sulphate, bisulphate of
    mercury, and Venetian lead in sugar confectionery
    and chocolate
  • Red lead gave Gloucester cheese its 'healthy' red
    hue
  • flour and arrowroot a rich thickness to cream

16
Food Analysis
  • The London County Medical Officer discovered the
    following in samples of ice cream- cocci,
    bacilli, torulae, cotton fiber, lice, bed bugs,
    bug's legs, fleas, straw, human hair, and cat and
    dog hair.
  • Such contaminated ice cream caused diphtheria,
    scarlet fever, diarrhoea, and enteric fever.

17
Food Analysis..
  • The Privy Council estimated in 1862 that
    one-fifth of butcher's meat in England and Wales
    came from animals which were 'considerably
    diseased' or had died of various diseases

18
Food Analysis..
  • As late as 1877 the Local Government Board found
    that
  • Approximately a quarter of the milk contained
    excessive water or chalk,
  • 10 of all the butter, 8 of the bread and 50
    of the gin had copper added to heighten the colour

19
Food Analysis..
  • The problem was that the adulteration
    could not be detected.
  • At that time, science was based in universities
    and had never been applied to the practical
    examination of food.

20
Food Analysis at University
21
Food Legislation
  • Clearly, food adulteration was a problem that the
    authorities had to sit up and take notice of,
    especially after the publication of Accums work.
  • Legislation was introduced in 1875 to protect the
    public The Sale of Food and Drugs Act, but it
    was not always properly and consistently
    implemented.

22
Food Legislation
  • In the late 19th century important discoveries
    were being made in the field of bacteriology
  • 1867 Pasteur's work laid the foundations of
    bacteriology
  • 1885 Salmon and Theobald Smith discovered
    the organism Salmonella Cholereasius in pigs
  • 1888 Gaertner isolated the organism Salmonella
    enteritidis
  • 1895 Van Ermingen described Clostridium botulinum

23
Food Legislation
  • By the First World War 1914 - 1918, it was
    accepted that food poisoning was caused by
    contamination with bacteria. Food manufacturers,
    especially canners, followed procedures designed
    to achieve and maintain good standards of hygiene
    and safety.

24
Food Legislation
  • In 1938, the Food and Drugs Act made reporting
    food poisoning a legal requirement. In 1939,
    there were reports of 83 incidents of food
    poisoning in England and Wales involving 94
    people. Following the Second World War, the
    number of reports rose rapidly. In 1955 there
    were 8961 outbreaks reported involving 20,000
    people.

25
Food Legislation
  • In 1955, the new Food and Drugs Act made it an
    offence to sell for human consumption any food to
    which substances had been added or abstracted or
    which had been processed so as to render it
    injurious to health. After this Act the number of
    reported incidents fell to 3184 involving 7907
    people in 1964.

26
Today.
  • The legislation of the UK consists of Acts (the
    primary controls) and Regulations (the secondary
    controls). The main Act covering food is now the
    Food Safety Act 1990. This establishes the key
    offences that protect the public. These include
    requirements that food
  • Should not be injurious to health
  • Should satisfy food safety requirements
  • Should be of the nature, substance and quality
    demanded by the purchaser
  • Should be labelled in a way that does not
    falsely describe the food or otherwise mislead.

27
Today
  • The legislation makes these offences absolute
    i.e, there need be no intention to commit the
    offence. However, to counterbalance this the Food
    Safety Act also contains a defence of due
    diligence.

28
Summary
  • In the middle of the 19th century, food was not
    at all safe!
  • Food adulteration was practised
  • Living conditions were unhealthy.
  • Diseases such as tuberculosis, typhoid fever,
    dysentery and cholera were spread by contaminated
    food, water and personal contact.

29
Summary
  • Significant Legislation in 1875
  • to protect the public
  • The Sale of Food and Drugs Act

30
Summary
  • Today we are a lot safer thanks to various
    pieces of legislation in place.
  • A lot more care is taken at various stages of
    the Food Chain to ensure standards of quality are
    maintained.
  • Various QA systems are in place such as
    HACCPs, BRC Standard and ISO 9000.

31
Online
  • This PowerPoint presentation can be found under
    the Resources section on The Food Club website
    at
  • www.thefoodclub.org.uk
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