Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University |
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Susan Duncan, Dairy and Sensory Evaluation Expertise Areas: Dairy product processing and quality, sensory evaluation Phone: (540) 231-8675 Fax: (540) 231-9293 Email:duncans@vt.edu Bill Eigel, Food Biochemistry Expertise Areas: Laboratory quality control, lab analytical techniques (non-microbial) Phone: (540) 231-6877 Fax: (540) 231-9293 Email: weigel@vt.edu Joe Marcy, Food Processing Expertise Areas: Juice processing, packaging and aseptics Phone: (540) 231-7850 Fax: (540) 231-9293 Email: jmarcy@vt.edu Expertise
Areas: Product
development Email: okeefes@vt.edu Susan Sumner: Food Safety Expertise Areas: Dairy microbiology, food safety, lactic acid bacteria, shelf-life and HACCP Phone: (540) 231-5280 Fax: (540) 231-9293 Email: sumners@vt.edu Dairy Staff: Walter Hartman: Dairy Plant Manager Phone: (540) 231-3037 Joell Eifert: Microbiology Phone: (540) 231-8697
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UPDATES AT VIRGINIA TECH Virginia FFA Association State Event Winners – Dairy Foods Teams from three Virginia high schools participated in the 2008 Dairy Foods Career Development event. The contest was held at the Department of Food Science on June 16 th as part of the 82 nd VA State FFA Convention. Participants completed a written exam on milk production and marketing, evaluated milk samples for flavor and quality, identified a variety of cheeses, evaluated milk sediment pads and milker parts for defects, and identified samples as natural or artificial dairy products. The contest is one of many educational activities at the VA FFA State Convention held at VA Tech in Blacksburg . Along with contests, the convention features workshops, renowned guest speakers and state FFA elections. Guest speaker Andrea Lohr, from Broadway, a former FFA member from Kentucky and wife of Del. Matt Lohr, R-Broadway, addressed the convention at Tech's Burruss Hall Auditorium. High individuals received pins and the state winning team received a plaque provided by the sponsors. The state winning team will compete at the National Career Development Event in Indianapolis , IN in October. The state runner up receives the opportunity to represent VA at the Big E competition in Massachusetts . The team from the Sherando FFA Chapter placed first in the contest. Team members were Glynis Dillender, Derek Henson, James Rockwell and Crystal Davis. Team coach was Chrissy Whitacre. Top placing individuals were Derek Henson of Sherando (1 st ), Crystal Davis of Sherando (2 nd ), Glynis Dillender of Sherando (3 rd ) and James Rockwell of Sherando (4 th ). FFA is a national youth organization of 476,732 student members preparing for leadership and careers in the science, business and technology of agriculture. There are 7,223 local chapters in all 50 states, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands . The VA FFA Association has over 10,800 members in 208 chapters. FFA strives to make a positive difference in the lives of students by developing their potential for premier leadership, personal growth and career success through agricultural education. Visit www.ffa.org and www.vaffa.org for more information. C apitol Hill Ice Cream Party Food Science staff and students served ice cream and root beer floats to thousands of people, including many senators and Congressional members, at the 26 th annual Capitol Hill Ice Cream Party. The event was held outside the Senate Building in Washington , D.C. and was sponsored by the International Dairy Foods Association (IDFA). The intent is to celebrate National Dairy Month and to showcase current IDFA activities. The party also serves to bring attention to current issues concerning the dairy industry. Volunteers from VA Tech's Department of Food Science and from Penn State arrived in D.C. on June 19 th to dish up a huge selection of ice cream flavors. The weather was beautiful and all who attended were in high spirits. HOT TOPICS AND DAIRY ISSUES TB Strain May Be Linked To Unpasteurized Dairy, Study Suggests ScienceDaily (May 6, 2008) — The incidence of a strain of tuberculosis (TB) called Mycobacterium bovis, or M. bovis, associated more often with cattle than humans, is increasing in San Diego and is concentrated mostly in Hispanics of Mexican origin, according to a study conducted by researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine in collaboration with San Diego County public health officials. Their analysis shows that changing patterns of TB in the United States are increasingly being driven by conditions outside of the country, especially in binational communities. Lead author Timothy C. Rodwell, M.D., Ph.D., MPH, associate physician and fellow in the Division of International Health & Cross Cultural Medicine at UC San Diego, and his colleagues analyzed regional data for TB cases in San Diego County obtained from the Tuberculosis Information Management System database maintained by the San Diego County TB Control Program. In their review of 3,291 culture-positive cases of TB covering 1994 to 2005, M. bovis was isolated in only eight percent of cases, but the strain accounted for 45 percent of TB cases in children under the age of 15, with almost all M. bovis cases from 2001 to 2005 found in persons of Hispanic ethnicity. “This strain of TB is thought to be primarily spread to humans through consumption of raw dairy products from infected cattle, with only minimal human-to-human contagion,” Rodwell said. “Some raw dairy products from Mexico , for instance, unpasteurized cheese like the popular queso fresco, have been found to contain M. bovis and should be considered unsafe.” Because of the widespread adoption of pasteurization of all commercially available dairy products in the United States , along with aggressive programs designed to keep dairy cattle in this country free of the disease, the threat of M. bovis in U.S. dairy products was largely eliminated in the mid-20th century. The San Diego-Tijuana bi-national region, however, shares one of the busiest border crossings in the United States with the Mexican state of Baja California , where M. bovis is prevalent in cattle and consumption of unpasteurized dairy products is common. The researchers found that more than 90 percent of M. bovis cases in San Diego occurred in Hispanics, most born in Mexico , Rodwell said. He added that collaborations with Mexico on prevention strategies including education and regulation of unpasteurized dairy products, along with elimination of the disease from dairy cattle would be required long term to ensure that this mode of transmission of TB is stopped. “The changing face of TB in San Diego County may reflect a new pattern of the disease in the United States ,” Rodwell said. During the period studied, cases of M. bovis TB increased at a rate of just over four percent per year, while cases from the more common strain of TB, M. tuberculosis, declined. Since M. bovis is resistant to one of the four drugs in the standard, six-month course of treatment for TB, treatment for M. bovis is usually extended to nine months. While M. bovis has been most often documented in Hispanic communities with close proximity to Mexico , the researchers point out that a recent review of such cases in New York City – also linked to unpasteurized cheese from Mexico – indicated that the problem is not limited to U.S. regions bordering Mexico . The study is now on line in advance of publication in the June issue of Emerging Infectious Diseases. Additional contributors to the study include senior author Steffanie A. Strathdee, Ph.D., Chief of UC San Diego 's Division of International Health & Cross Cultural Medicine; Marisa Moore and Kathleen S. Moser, County of San Diego Health and Human Services; and Stephanie K. Brodine, San Diego State University . The study was funded by the National Institute of Health.
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