Gort’s Gouda Cheese Farm back in business in B.C.

Kathy and Gary Wikkerink are pleased to be able to sell cheese again after the Canadian Food Inspection Agency lifted the prohibition on their Gort's Gouda Cheese Farm.
Kathy and Gary Wikkerink are pleased to be able to sell cheese again after the Canadian Food Inspection Agency lifted the prohibition on their Gort’s Gouda Cheese Farm.

Text and photo by Martha Wickett – Salmon Arm Observer

In the end, it came down to two wheels of cheese.

On Friday, Oct. 18, five weeks to the day that they learned their cheese was suspected in an E. coli outbreak, the Wikkerink family received good news.

Officials from both the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) and the BC Centre for Disease Control (BCCDC) came to Gort’s Gouda Cheese Farm in Salmon Arm, British Columbia, on Friday morning to tell the owners that the prohibition had been lifted—the Wikkerinks could once again sell their cheese.

The owners were told “basically that no E. coli was found on the premises and that it was only found in two wheels of red pepper and black pepper (cheese),” a relieved Gary Wikkerink told the Observer.

He said some of the cheese found to be tainted had been cut up and repackaged into 250-gram weights and then returned.

“They took between two- and three-hundred samples, and almost all of them came back negative, except for the two wheels,” he said of the CFIA investigation.

The lifting of the prohibition on sales comes with a restriction. Any cheese made after Sept. 14 must be tested before it leaves the premises.

Despite the infamy the farm gained after the cheese recalls, he thinks the notifications were necessary.

“Although only two wheels were found to be contaminated, it’s better safe than sorry.”

Both Gary and his spouse Kathy say a huge weight has now been lifted off their shoulders.

“It was a very humbling experience, the whole thing,” remarked Kathy, explaining that it’s “because you feel how vulnerable you are. When you’re working in the food industry, working with real food, you’re very vulnerable.”

She said the community has been highly supportive, both with encouraging words and with stores placing orders again.

“It makes us more passionate about what we’re doing, and also the due diligence to make it effective.”

Lynn Willcott, acting program director of food protection services with BCCDC, said no major problems were discovered at the farm.

“We found some minor deficiencies throughout the process, no major deficiencies at all… We’re confident as they move forward their products will be safe to consume.”

He noted that cheeses produced before the recall are also fine.

“We’re very confident those cheeses are safe. There was extensive testing done with those.”

Asked how he can be sure the cheese will be safe if the source of contamination wasn’t pinpointed, he said the testing prior to the cheese leaving the plant will ensure it.

READ MORE: Salmon Arm Observer

In praise of raw-milk cheese

Gort's Gouda Cheese Farm produces a wonderful variety of cheeses, many of them goudas, some of them made with raw milk.
Gort’s Gouda Cheese Farm produces a wonderful variety of cheeses, many of them goudas, some of them made with raw milk.

At the end of the day, we all have the responsibility to think about risk, and to manage it as we see fit (what we eat and drink). While it is simply not feasible to eliminate all food pathogens, it is possible to destroy a food culture, a way of life, and a delicious product, in a rush to placate all and sundry. Accidents will happen, even with right-thinking people doing their best to be safe. I am comfortable with that reality. If you’re not, don’t eat the cheese.

—Liane Faulder

Read more by Liane Faulder of the Edmonton Journal by clicking here. She captures perfectly our thinking on raw-milk cheese in light of the E. coli outbreak at Gort’s Gouda Cheese Farm in Salmon Arm, B.C.

What are your thoughts on raw-milk cheese? Do you enjoy it? Do you avoid it?