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Evaluation of post-fermentation heating times and temperatures for controlling Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli cells in a non-dried, pepperoni-type sausage
Author(s) -
Laura E. Shane,
Anna C.S. PortoFett,
Bradley A. Shoyer,
Randall K. Phebus,
Harshavardhan Thippareddi,
Ashley Hallowell,
Kelsey J. Miller,
Lianna FosterBey,
Stephen G. Campano,
Peter J. Taormina,
Daniel L. Glowski,
R. B. Tompkin,
John B. Luchansky
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
italian journal of food safety
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.359
H-Index - 13
ISSN - 2239-7132
DOI - 10.4081/ijfs.2018.7250
Subject(s) - escherichia coli , microbiology and biotechnology , fermentation , toxin , food science , chemistry , biology , biochemistry , gene
Coarse ground meat was mixed with non-meat ingredients and starter culture () and then inoculated with an 8-strain cocktail of Shiga toxin-producing (ca. 7.0 log CFU/g). Batter was fine ground, stuffed into fibrous casings, and fermented at 35.6°C and ca. 85% RH to a final target pH of ca. pH 4.6 or ca. pH 5.0. After fermentation, the pepperoni-like sausage were heated to target internal temperatures of 37.8°, 43.3°, 48.9°, and 54.4°C and held for 0.5 to 12.5 h. Regardless of the heating temperature, the endpoint pH in products fermented to a target pH of pH 4.6 and pH 5.0 was pH 4.56±0.13 (range of pH 4.20 to pH 4.86) and pH 4.96±0.12 (range of pH 4.70 to pH 5.21), respectively. Fermentation alone delivered ca. a 0.3- to 1.2-log CFU/g reduction in pathogen numbers. Fermentation to ca. pH 4.6 or ca. pH 5.0 followed by post-fermentation heating to 37.8° to 54.4°C and holding for 0.5 to 12.5 h generated total reductions of ca. 2.0 to 6.7 log CFU/g.

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