Journal of Dairy Science (Jun 2023)

Shelf-life storage temperature has a considerably larger effect than high-temperature, short-time pasteurization temperature on the growth of spore-forming bacteria in fluid milk

  • T.T. Lott,
  • M. Wiedmann,
  • N.H. Martin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 106, no. 6
pp. 3838 – 3855

Abstract

Read online

ABSTRACT: In the absence of postpasteurization contamination, psychrotolerant, aerobic spore-forming bacteria that survive high-temperature, short-time (HTST) pasteurization, limit the ability to achieve HTST extended shelf-life milk. Therefore, the goal of the current study was to evaluate bacterial outgrowth in milk pasteurized at different temperatures (75, 85, or 90°C, each for 20 s) and subsequently stored at 3, 6.5, or 10°C. An initial ANOVA of bacterial concentrations over 14 d of storage revealed a highly significant effect of storage temperatures, but no significant effect of HTST. At d 14, average bacterial counts for milk stored at 3, 6.5, and 10°C were 1.82, 3.55, and 6.86 log10 cfu/mL, respectively. Time to reach 1,000,000 cfu/mL (a bacterial concentration where consumers begin to notice microbially induced sensory defects in fluid milk) was estimated to be 68, 27, and 10 d for milk stored at 3, 6.5, and 10°C, respectively. Out of 95 isolates characterized with rpoB allelic typing, 6 unique genera, 15 unique species, and 44 unique rpoB allelic types were represented. The most common genera identified were Paenibacillus, Bacillus, and Lysinibacillus. Nonmetric multidimensional scaling identified that Bacillus was significantly associated with 3 and 10°C, whereas Paenibacillus was consistently found across all storage temperatures. Overall, our data show that storage temperature has a substantially larger effect on fluid milk shelf life than HTST and suggests that abuse temperatures (e.g., storage at 10°C) allow for growth of Bacillus species (including Bacillus cereus genomospecies) that do not grow at lower temperatures. This indicates that stringent control of storage and distribution temperatures is critical for producing extended shelf-life HTST milk, particularly concerning new distribution pathways for HTST pasteurized milk (e.g., electronic commerce), and when enhanced control of spores in raw milk is not feasible.

Keywords