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Effects of Inoculation Procedures on Variability and Repeatability of Salmonella Thermal Resistance in Wheat Flour.
- Source :
-
Journal of food protection [J Food Prot] 2016 Nov; Vol. 79 (11), pp. 1833-1839. - Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Limited prior research has shown that inoculation methods affect thermal resistance of Salmonella in low-moisture foods; however, these effects and their repeatability have not been systematically quantified. Consequently, method variability across studies limits utility of individual data sets and cross-study comparisons. Therefore, the objective was to evaluate the effects of inoculation methodologies on stability and thermal resistance of Salmonella in a low-moisture food (wheat flour), and the repeatability of those results, based on data generated by two independent laboratories. The experimental design consisted of a cross-laboratory comparison, both conducting isothermal Salmonella inactivation studies in wheat flour (~0.45 water activity, 80°C), utilizing five different inoculation methods: (i) broth-based liquid inoculum, (ii) lawn-based liquid inoculum, (iii) lawn-based pelletized inoculum, (iv) direct harvest of lawn culture with wheat flour, and (v) fomite transfer of a lawn culture. Inoculated wheat flour was equilibrated ~5 days to ~0.45 water activity and then was subjected to isothermal treatment (80°C) in aluminum test cells. Results indicated that inoculation method impacted repeatability, population stability, and inactivation kinetics (α = 0.05), regardless of laboratory. Salmonella inoculated with the broth-based liquid inoculum method and the fomite transfer of a lawn culture method exhibited instability during equilibration. Lawn-based cultures resulted in stable populations prior to thermal treatment; however, the method using direct harvest of lawn culture with wheat flour yielded different D-values across the laboratories (α = 0.05), which was attributed to larger potential impact of operator variability. The lawn-based liquid inoculum and the lawn-based pelletized inoculum methods yielded stable inoculation levels and repeatable D-values (~250 and ~285 s, respectively). Also, inoculation level (3 to 8 log CFU/g) did not affect D-values (using the lawn-based liquid inoculum method). Overall, the results demonstrate that inoculation methods significantly affect Salmonella population kinetics and subsequent interpretation of thermal inactivation data for low-moisture foods.
- Subjects :
- Colony Count, Microbial
Food Microbiology
Salmonella drug effects
Flour
Triticum
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1944-9097
- Volume :
- 79
- Issue :
- 11
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Journal of food protection
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 28221914
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.4315/0362-028X.JFP-16-057