Italian Journal of Food Safety (Jul 2018)

Evaluation of post-fermentation heating times and temperatures for controlling Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli cells in a non-dried, pepperoni-type sausage

  • Laura E. Shane,
  • Anna C.S. Porto-Fett,
  • Bradley A. Shoyer,
  • Randall K. Phebus,
  • Harshavardhan Thippareddi,
  • Ashley Hallowell,
  • Kelsey Miller,
  • Lianna Foster-Bey,
  • Stephen G. Campano,
  • Peter J. Taormina,
  • Daniel L. Glowski,
  • Robert B. Tompkin,
  • John B. Luchansky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4081/ijfs.2018.7250
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2

Abstract

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Coarse ground meat was mixed with non-meat ingredients and starter culture (Pediococcus acidilactici) and then inoculated with an 8-strain cocktail of Shiga toxinproducing Escherichia coli (ca. 7.0 log CFU/g). Batter was fine ground, stuffed into fibrous casings, and fermented at 35.6°C and ca. 85% RH to a final target pH of ca. pH 4.6 or ca. pH 5.0. After fermentation, the pepperoni- like sausage were heated to target internal temperatures of 37.8°, 43.3°, 48.9°, and 54.4°C and held for 0.5 to 12.5 h. Regardless of the heating temperature, the endpoint pH in products fermented to a target pH of pH 4.6 and pH 5.0 was pH 4.56±0.13 (range of pH 4.20 to pH 4.86) and pH 4.96±0.12 (range of pH 4.70 to pH 5.21), respectively. Fermentation alone delivered ca. a 0.3- to 1.2-log CFU/g reduction in pathogen numbers. Fermentation to ca. pH 4.6 or ca. pH 5.0 followed by post-fermentation heating to 37.8° to 54.4°C and holding for 0.5 to 12.5 h generated total reductions of ca. 2.0 to 6.7 log CFU/g.

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