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Selection of food cultures with protective properties for cooked ham. | LitMetric

Selection of food cultures with protective properties for cooked ham.

Food Microbiol

Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie, Forestali e Alimentari, Università Degli Studi di Torino, Largo Paolo Braccini N°2, 10095, Grugliasco (TO), Italy.

Published: June 2023

Sliced cooked ham stored in modified atmosphere packaging (MAP) can be spoiled by lactic acid bacteria (LAB) which are dominating under psychrotrophic conditions. Depending on the strains, the colonization can result in a premature spoilage characterized by off-flavors, gas and slime production, discoloration, and acidification. The purpose of this study was the isolation, identification and characterization of potential food culture with protective properties, able to prevent or delay spoilage in cooked-ham. The first step was to identify by means of microbiological analysis, the microbial consortia both in unspoiled and in spoiled lots of sliced cooked ham by the use of media for the detection lactic acid bacteria and total viable count. Counts ranged from values lower than 1 Log CFU/g to 9 Log CFU/g in spoiled and unflawed samples. The interaction between consortia was then studied in order to screen for strains able to inhibit spoilage consortia. Strains showing antimicrobial activity were identified and characterized by molecular methods and tested for their physiological features. Among a total of 140 strains isolated, nine were selected for their ability to inhibit a large number of spoilage consortia, to grow and ferment at 4 °C and to produce bacteriocins. The effectiveness of the fermentation made by food culture was evaluated, through challenge tests in situ, analysing the microbial profiles of artificially inoculated cooked-ham slices during storage by high throughput 16 S rRNA gene sequencing. The native population in situ resulted competitive against the inoculated strains and only one strain was able to significantly reduce the native populations reaching about 46.7% of the relative abundance. The results obtained in this study provide information about the selection of autochthonous LAB on the base of their action against spoilage consortia, in order to select protective potential cultures able to improve the microbial quality of sliced cooked ham.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2023.104218DOI Listing

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