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Microbiological Quality of Various Medicinal Herbal Teas and Coffee Substitutes
Author(s) -
V.H. Tournas,
Eugenia Katsoudas
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
microbiology insights
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1178-6361
DOI - 10.4137/mbi.s943
Subject(s) - alternaria alternata , penicillium , orange (colour) , biology , food science , fusarium proliferatum , alternaria , horticulture , botany , fusarium
Various herbal teas including German chamomile, Chrysanthemum Vascuflow herb tea, hop, jasmine and orange flowers, sweet marjoram, spearmint and thyme leaves, and papaya-mint tea as well as coffee substitutes (Bambu instant Swiss, Teeccino chocolate-mint, and Teeccino Mediterranean Espresso) were analyzed for fungal contamination and the presence of aerobic mesophilic bacteria (APC). The results of this investigation showed that fungal counts reached levels as high as 5.8 × 10 5 colony forming units (cfu) per gram. German chamomile harbored the highest fungal contamination. The most common fungi found in herbal teas were Aspergillus niger, Penicillium spp., Eurotium rubrum, E. chevalieri, A. flavus, Fusarium spp., Alternaria alternata , and yeasts. Among the coffee substitutes, only the chocolate-mint coffee was contaminated with low numbers (<1.0 × 10 3 cfu g -1 ) of E. rubrum, Ulocladium spp. and Phoma spp., and with yeasts (< 100–6.8 × 10 3 cfu g -1 ). Aerobic mesophilic bacteria were recovered from 100% of the herbal tea, chocolate-mint and Mediterranean Espresso, and from 50% of the Bambu instant Swiss coffee samples. The highest APC counts of 1.2 × 10 7 cfu g -1 were observed in spearmint leaves

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