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Microbial Progression in Sliced Vacuum Packaged Bacon at Refrigeration Temperatures
Author(s) -
Dempster J. F.
Publication year - 1973
Publication title -
journal of applied bacteriology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.889
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1365-2672
pISSN - 0021-8847
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2672.1973.tb04140.x
Subject(s) - micrococcus , bacteria , microbacterium , staphylococcus , microbiology and biotechnology , streptococcus , food science , biology , corynebacterium , staphylococcus aureus , genetics , 16s ribosomal rna
S ummary . Three hundred and forty eight strains of micro‐organisms were isolated from packaged bacon which had been cured by one or other of 2 methods (A and B) and stored at 0–10° for 7 weeks. Before storage, Micrococcus sub‐group 7 (47%) and coryneform bacteria (33%) were the principal contaminants of bacon cured by method A and Micrococcus subgroup 1 (20%) and Microbacterium thermosphactum (21%), in bacon cured by method B. After 7 days at 0°, coagulase negative staphylococci accounted for 10 and 33% of the microflora in bacon A and B, respectively: other organisms were micrococci, 60% (A) and 25% (B); corynebacteria, 20% (A) and 12·5% (B), yeasts ( Torulopsis candida and T. dattila ) 5% (A) and 29% (B). In the following month at 10°, Micrococcus sub‐group 5 was the dominant (43–88%) contaminant of bacon B; the incidence of Streptococcus Group N ranged from 27–36% and that of unidentified lactic acid bacteria from 23–32%. Towards the end of storage, the order of dominance was Micrococcus sub‐group 3 (38–58%) and atypical streptobacteria (38%) in A; Streptococcus Group N (42%) and Gram positive rods (5–20%) in B. Staphylococci tended to die out during storage of bacons cured by the 2 methods and coagulase positive staphylococci were not isolated.