Food


Food Microbiology - Research from University of Massachusetts broadens understanding of food microbiology

  2008 OCT 20 - (VerticalNews.com) -- "The most commonly used methods to generate microbial inactivation curves are based on the assumptions that microbial mortality follows first order kinetics and that the temperature effect on the 'D value' or exponential rate constant is determined by the log linear model or the Arrhenius equation, respectively. However, many bacterial cells and spores follow the Weibull-Log Logistic (WeLL) model and software to simulate pasteurization and sterilization processes using this model has been available for some years as free clownloaclable programs written in MS Excel (R)," researchers in the United States report ...read more


Food Microbiology - Investigators at Polytechnic University zero in on food microbiology

  2008 OCT 20 - (VerticalNews.com) -- According to recent research from Cartagena, Spain, "Small cell numbers in complex food matrices and undefined PCR inhibitors often limit detection and identification of DNA species by molecular techniques. Thus in many industrial situations enrichment growths are performed. However. growth speed of different species in complex microbial mixtures in defined media is in most cases different. thus final results do not always reflect the starting situation. ...read more


Food Microbiology - New food microbiology study findings have been reported from R. Talon et al

  2008 OCT 20 - (VerticalNews.com) -- "Traditional dry fermented sausages are manufactured without addition of starter cultures in small-scale processing units, their fermentation relying on indigenous microflora. Characterisation and control of these specific bacteria are essential for the sensory quality and the safety of the sausages," scientists writing in the International Journal of Food Microbiology report.

  "The aim of this study was to develop an autochthonous starter culture that improves safety while preserving the typical sensory characteristics of traditional sausages. An autochthonous starter composed of Lactobacillus sakei.Staphylococcus equorum and Staphylococcus succinus isolated from a traditional fermented sausage was developed. These strains were tested for their susceptibility to antibiotics and their production of biogenic amines. This starter was evaluated in situ at the French traditional processing unit where the strains had been isolated. Effects of the autochthonous starter were assessed by analysing the microbial, physico-chemical, biochemical and sensory characteristics of the sausages. Inoculation with the chosen species was confirmed using known species-specific PCR assays for L sakei and S. equorum and a species-specific PCR assay developed in this study for S. succinus. Strains were monitored by pulse-field gel electrophoresis typing. Addition of autochthonous microbial starter cultures improved safety compared with the traditional natural fermentation of sausages, by inhibiting the pathogen Listeria monocytogenes, decreasing the level of biogenic amines and by limiting fatty acid and cholesterol oxidation. Moreover. autochthonous starter did not affect the typical sensory quality of the traditional sausages. This is the first time to our knowledge that selection, development and validation in situ of autochthonous starter cultures have been carried out, and also the first time that S. equorum together with S. succinus have been used as starter cultures for meat fermentation," wrote R. Talon and colleagues ...read more


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