Published 2014

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Publication details

Journal : Food Control , vol. 43 , p. 150–154 , 2014

Publisher : Elsevier

International Standard Numbers :
Printed : 0956-7135
Electronic : 1873-7129

Publication type : Academic article

Contributors : Ates, Mehmet Baris; Skipnes, Dagbjørn; Rode, Tone Mari; Lekang, Odd-Ivar

If you have questions about the publication, you may contact Nofima’s Chief Librarian.

Kjetil Aune
Chief Librarian
kjetil.aune@nofima.no

Summary

Lower thermal load on foods is desirable for food producers and consumers as the food gets higher quality. With reduced thermal load, the investigation of food safety is of importance. In this study, microbial inactivation efficacy of a new retort process with high frequency longitudinal agitation was compared to static retort process which was used as a benchmark. As a model, fish soup samples, inoculated with approximately 108 cells/ml Listeria innocua, was exposed to mild heat treatments at 62, 65 and 68 ºC. Results clearly demonstrated that agitating mode can provide equivalent lethality to the model organism L. innocua within significantly shorter heating times compared to static mode. Bacteria were not detected on TSA-YE plates after 11.5, 6.8 and 5.5 min processing in agitating mode; 77, 67 and 52 min processing in static mode at 62, 65 and 68 ºC respectively. Bacterial inactivation in agitating mode was generally correlated with estimated inactivation based on product core temperature, D- and z-values for L. innocua. This may indicate that distribution of the heat load over the soup was enhanced through agitation. Results showed that utilization of high frequency longitudinal agitation mechanism in retorts is promising for reducing the thermal load on food products without compromising on food safety related to non-spore forming pathogens.

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