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The effect of thawing and storage temperature on the microbial quality of commercial frozen ready meals and experimental reduced salt frozen ready meals
Date
2012
Abstract
The effect of thawing at 4ÂșC or ambient temperature (~20ÂșC) on the indigenous microflora of commercial regular salt (0.6-1.3% w/w) frozen ready meals was investigated. In a separate trial, the microbial quality of regular salt frozen ready meals was compared with reformulated reduced salt (0.2-0.54%, w/w) counterparts stored at 4ÂșC, 10ÂșC or ambient temperature over 8 days. All samples were analysed for psychrophilic, mesophilic, thermophilic and sporeforming bacteria, Pseudomonas, Staphylococcus and for the presence of Listeria species. During storage, psychrophiles, mesophiles, coliforms, Pseudomonas, sporeformers and Listeria were detected in the commercial regular salt ready meals while mesophiles, thermophiles, coliforms and Pseudomonas were detected in the reduced salt counterparts. Levels of mesophilic bacteria ranged from ~3-4 log10 in commercial regular salt meals and ~2-5 log10 in experimental lower salt meals. Overall, a substantial reduction in salt content (50 â 66%) did not appear to adversely impact on the microbial quality of the reduced salt meals.
Supervisor
Description
peer-reviewed
Publisher
Canadian Center of Science and Education (CCSE)
Citation
Journal of Food Research;1(2), pp. 99-112
Collections
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Keywords
Funding code
Funding Information
Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
Sustainable Development Goals
External Link
Type
Article
Rights
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/1.0/
