It's summer . . . time for neighbourhood gatherings and
barbecues. Not to be a downer, but health-conscious fun-lovers
should be wary - and not just of gaining weight from all those
extra kilojoules.
We're talking, of course, about double-dipping.
It turns out that science backs the popular fear that
partygoers are sharing more than good cheer when they go back
to the communal bowl of dip for seconds with the same chip.
Here's what you should consider before you bite:
It's really that bad: Food science students at Clemson
University, in the US, examined the effects of double-dipping
using volunteers, wheat crackers and several sample dips.
They found that three to six double dips in one bowl
transferred about 10,000 bacteria from the eaters' mouths to
the remaining dip.
That means if you're at a party and three to six people
double-dip their chips, any chip you dip may pick up at least
50 to 100 bacteria. The research was published online in the
Journal of Food Safety.
Will it make you ill? Maybe.
It depends on how much bacteria you pick up, how many people
are double-dipping and what kind of bacteria they have in
their mouths.
Pick thick: In general, thicker sauces - cheese dip,
chocolate syrup, hummus - may be safer. They have fewer
bacteria and the number of bacteria in them gets smaller over
time, the Clemson study found.
Salsa picked up the most bacteria, probably because it was
runny, making it easier for bacteria to slip off the chip
back into the bowl.
TV imitates life: Clemson professor Paul L. Dawson and
his students were inspired to test the double-dip theory by a
rerun of a 1993 Seinfeld episode in which George
Costanza is confronted at a funeral reception by his
girlfriend's brother after he dips the same chip twice.
The scene, which ends with the two men wrestling for the
chip, is credited as the first popular reference to the
social taboo of "double-dipping".
The solution: Serve small, one-dip chips or only munch
with people you "really" like. When double-dipping runs amok
it's "like kissing everybody at the party," Prof Dawson says.
- MCT
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