Please Clean Your Spice Jars
Whether you’re making a simple green salad with a tangy vinaigrette or a large, roasted piece of meat with an aromatic, crusty bark, you will, at some point, grab a jar or two from your spice rack. Afterwards, while cleaning up, you will return the jars to their home, be it a highly-organized, alphabetized spice rack, or a less organized spice drawer. You probably won’t clean the jars, however. Most people do not. You should.
According to The Kitchn, a recent study found that spice jars are less likely to be cleaned than other “high-touch” spots like cutting boards and countertops:
In a recent study
, 371 participants were asked to prepare meals in test kitchens using raw ground turkey patties and a ready-to-eat salad. The secret ingredient on the menu? An innocuous virus called MS2. The real purpose of the study was not to try out new recipes (as the participants were told) but to see how much cross-contamination happens in a kitchen. Researchers discovered that MS2 cross-contamination was found on most surfaces less than 20 percent of the time, but there was one high-touch spot that was contaminated a whopping 48 percent of the time:
spice jars
.
Though MS2 is a harmless trace virus, it demonstrates how other harmful pathogens can make their way around the kitchen, even if you think you’re practicing good kitchen hygiene.

Though they may not be as obviously dirty as knives, pans, cutting boards, and countertops, spice jars are susceptible to getting hit by splatters, spills, and splashes. You also have to touch the jars with your hands to access the spices inside, and while I’m sure you’re vigilant about hand washing, mistakes happen. (One never means to grab a jar of garlic powder with the same hand that touched the raw chicken.)
Luckily, there is a very easy solution to this grody problem: Clean your spice jars. Make it part of your clean-up routine. Before you return your dried herbs and spices back to their home, give the (closed) jars a quick wipe down with a cloth dampened with all-purposed cleaner or, if you want to go a more “natural” route, a 50/50 mixture of water and white vinegar. This will not only prevent harmful pathogens like salmonella and E. coli from contaminating your kitchen, but keep gunk and grime from building up on your herbs and spices. (Gunk and grime not only look and feel gross, they can serve as a breeding ground for bacteria.)
RECOMMENDED NEWS

How to Actually Enjoy Thanksgiving, Even If You’re the One Cooking
You can smell it in the earth. You can feel it in the air. It’s every home cook’s favorite holiday a...

Make the Twisty TikTok Bacon in Your Air Fryer
I have never believed there is a “best way” to cook any particular food. I have my favorites, and re...

Making a Salad Without Lettuce Is Courageous and Smart
Edible leaves, commonly referred to as “lettuce” or “greens,” are often used as the foundation of a ...

Glaze Your Green Beans in Butter and Stock
I’m not sure when I had my first un-casseroled green bean, but I don’t remember being particularly i...

Go Ahead, Add a Little Cheddar to Your Brownies
I love a boxed brownie mix. I think it is very hard to make a brownie that tastes better than one ma...

You Can Make Many Pasta Shapes From Just One
Show me someone who can turn away a bowl of heart-shaped cacio e pepe, and I’ll show you someone who...
Comments on "Please Clean Your Spice Jars" :