Inhibitory effects of the powders of paprika, red pepper, black pepper, sage, oregano and thyme in a solid medium after heat treatment and gamma-irradiation on the development from spore of Bacillus subtilis were examined using calorimetry. Based on the f(t) curve (Antoce et al., 1996) from the thermogram obtained, two parameters, the growth rate constant and the growth retardation time, were used to evaluate the inhibitory effect. The inhibitory effects of paprika and red pepper powders were enhanced by the spore pretreatment with heat, but not significantly with irradiation. The inhibitory enhancement by preheating depended upon the kind of spices used. Sage, oregano and thyme powders per se inhibited the development from spores completely even at a low concentration of 0.04 g/ml. Inhibitory effects of paprika and red pepper powders were obviously observed with heat treatment but not with irradiation. With black pepper powder, by contrast, substantial enhancement was neither observed with heat treatment nor gamma-irradiation. The results suggested that the addition of those spice powders might be useful in the thermal inactivation process of solid foods contaminated with Bacillus subtilis spores.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.4265/bio.23.121DOI Listing

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