Literature DB >> 26219366

Comparison of the Effect of Curing Ingredients Derived from Purified and Natural Sources on Inhibition of Clostridium perfringens Outgrowth during Cooling of Deli-Style Turkey Breast.

Amanda M King1, Kathleen A Glass2, Andrew L Milkowski1, Jeffrey J Sindelar3.   

Abstract

The antimicrobial impact of purified and natural sources of both nitrite and ascorbate were evaluated against Clostridium perfringens during the postthermal processing cooling period of deli-style turkey breast. The objective of phase I was to assess comparable concentrations of nitrite (0 or 100 ppm) and ascorbate (0 or 547 ppm) from both purified and natural sources. Phase II was conducted to investigate concentrations of nitrite (50, 75, or 100 ppm) from cultured celery juice powder and ascorbate (0, 250, or 500 ppm) from cherry powder to simulate alternative curing formulations. Ground turkey breast (75% moisture, 1.2% salt, pH 6.2) treatments were inoculated with C. perfringens spores (three-strain mixture) to yield 2.5 log CFU/g. Individual 50-g portions were vacuum packaged, cooked to 71.1°C, and chilled from 54.4 to 26.7°C in 5 h and from 26.7 to 7.2°C in 10 additional hours. Triplicate samples were assayed for growth of C. perfringens at predetermined intervals by plating on tryptose-sulfite-cycloserine agar; experiments were replicated three times. In phase I, uncured, purified nitrite, and natural nitrite treatments without ascorbate had 5.3-, 4.2-, and 4.4-log increases in C. perfringens, respectively, at 15 h, but <1-log increase was observed at the end of chilling in treatments containing 100 ppm of nitrite and 547 ppm of ascorbate from either source. In phase II, 0, 50, 75, and 100 ppm of nitrite and 50 ppm of nitrite plus 250 ppm of ascorbate supported 4.5-, 3.9-, 3.5-, 2.2-, and 1.5-log increases in C. perfringens, respectively. In contrast, <1-log increase was observed after 15 h in the remaining phase II treatments supplemented with 50 ppm of nitrite and 500 ppm of ascorbate or ≥75 ppm of nitrite and ≥250 ppm of ascorbate. These results confirm that equivalent concentrations of nitrite, regardless of the source, provide similar inhibition of C. perfringens during chilling and that ascorbate enhances the antimicrobial effect of nitrite on C. perfringens at concentrations commonly used in alternative cured meats.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26219366     DOI: 10.4315/0362-028X.JFP-14-491

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Food Prot        ISSN: 0362-028X            Impact factor:   2.077


  2 in total

Review 1.  Clean Label Meat Technology: Pre-Converted Nitrite as a Natural Curing.

Authors:  Hae In Yong; Tae-Kyung Kim; Hee-Don Choi; Hae Won Jang; Samooel Jung; Yun-Sang Choi
Journal:  Food Sci Anim Resour       Date:  2021-03-01

2.  Microbiological safety of processed meat products formulated with low nitrite concentration - A review.

Authors:  Soomin Lee; Heeyoung Lee; Sejeong Kim; Jeeyeon Lee; Jimyeong Ha; Yukyung Choi; Hyemin Oh; Kyoung-Hee Choi; Yohan Yoon
Journal:  Asian-Australas J Anim Sci       Date:  2018-03-13       Impact factor: 2.509

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.