| Literature DB >> 27800444 |
Luca Fasolato1, Barbara Cardazzo1, Stefania Balzan1, Lisa Carraro1, Andrea Nadia Andreani1, Agnese Taticchi2, Enrico Novelli1.
Abstract
Phenols are plant metabolites characterised by several interesting bioactive properties such as antioxidant and bactericidal activities. In this study the application of a phenols concentrate (PC) from olive vegetation water to two different fresh products - gilt-head seabream (Sparus aurata) and chicken breast - was described. Products were treated in a bath of PC (22 g/L; chicken breast) or sprayed with two different solutions (L1:0.75 and L2:1.5 mg/mL; seabream) and then stored under refrigeration conditions. The shelf life was monitored through microbiological analyses - quality index method for seabream and a specific sensory index for raw breast. The secondary products of lipid-peroxidation of the chicken breast were determined using the thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARs) test on cooked samples. Multivariate statistical techniques were adopted to investigate the impact of phenols and microbiological data were fitted by DMfit software. In seabream, the levels of PC did not highlight any significant difference on microbiological and sensory features. DMfit models suggested an effect only on H2S producing bacteria with an increased lag phase compared to the control samples (C: 87 h vs L2: 136 h). The results on chicken breast showed that the PC bath clearly modified the growth of Pseudomonas and Enterobacteriaceae. The phenol dipping was effective in limiting lipid-peroxidation (TBARs) after cooking. Treated samples disclosed an increase of shelf life of 2 days. These could be considered as preliminary findings suggesting the use of this concentrate as preservative in some fresh products.Entities:
Keywords: Fresh food; Olive vegetation water; Phenols; Shelf life
Year: 2016 PMID: 27800444 PMCID: PMC5076737 DOI: 10.4081/ijfs.2016.5651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ital J Food Saf ISSN: 2239-7132
Figure 1.Multivariate analyses of gilt-head seabream data. A) Linear discriminant analysis according to the principal component scores of PC1 and PC3; B) distance based redundancy analysis of quality index method data and the vector overlay of microbial of skin samples features of Sparus aurata.
Figure 2.DMfit results of complete Baranyi and Roberts models. A) Quality index methods data and threshold of rejection; B) total psycrotrophic count; C) H2S-producing bacteria (putative Shewanella) according to the phenolic concentrate doses.
Figure 3.Results of phenolic bath on breast chicken. A) Distance based redundancy analysis of sensory index and microbial features; B) Pseudomonas Log10 colony forming units (CFU)/g and the threshold of rejection; C) Enterobacteriaceae Log10CFU/g; D) colour changes of flesh surface.
Figure 4.Thiobarbituric acid reactive substances value (mg MDA/kg) in meat of chicken breast cooked at 80°C for 30 min in a water bath and stored at 4°C for 72 h before analysis. A) minced sample; B) sample cooked as such. Values are expressed as mean±standard deviation. *P<0.05, ***P<0.001.