1 Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition (ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1337-2658 [E.T.R.]), East Lansing, Michigan 48824.
2 Department of Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, East Lansing, Michigan 48824.
J Food Prot. 2019 Feb;82(2):287-300. doi: 10.4315/0362-028X.JFP-18-277.
Temperature is arguably the most important factor affecting microbial proliferation in fresh-cut produce. In this study, growth of Listeria monocytogenes in diced onions and celery and Salmonella Typhimurium in diced tomatoes was determined in modified atmosphere packages and snap-fit containers using three fluctuating temperature scenarios for transport, retail storage, and display. As expected, L. monocytogenes growth in diced onions and celery varied depending on the extent of temperature abuse, with exposure to high and intermediate temperature-abuse scenarios generally being growth supportive. A Baranyi primary model with a square-root secondary model for maximum growth rate, and a linear model for maximum population density, were used to estimate Listeria growth under fluctuating temperature. Accuracy and acceptability of the model prediction were evaluated in terms of root mean square error (RMSE) and acceptable prediction zone (APZ), respectively. Overall, growth predictions for L. monocytogenes were more accurate for celery (RMSE, 0.28 to 0.47) than onions (RMSE, 0.42 to 1.53) under the fluctuating temperature scenarios tested. However, both predictions yielded APZ values that ranged from 82 to 100% for celery and 36 to 78% for onions. In contrast, Salmonella Typhimurium populations increased more than 1 log CFU/g in diced tomatoes under the three fluctuating temperature scenarios studied. Overall, these diced products packaged under a high-oxygen atmosphere showed decreased pathogen growth compared with product stored in a passive modified atmosphere. Findings from this study will be particularly useful in assessing the risk associated with consumption of diced celery, tomatoes, and onions and in designing effective packaging strategies to minimize pathogen growth in fresh-cut produce.
温度可以说是影响新鲜切割产品中微生物增殖的最重要因素。在这项研究中,使用三种波动温度方案(运输、零售储存和展示),在改良气氛包装和 snap-fit 容器中确定了单核细胞增生李斯特菌在切块洋葱和芹菜中的生长情况,以及肠炎沙门氏菌在切块番茄中的生长情况。正如预期的那样,单核细胞增生李斯特菌在切块洋葱和芹菜中的生长情况因温度滥用的程度而异,暴露于高温和中温滥用情况通常是支持生长的。使用平方根二次模型的 Baranyi 主要模型来估计最大生长率,以及线性模型来估计最大种群密度,用于在波动温度下估计李斯特菌的生长情况。通过均方根误差 (RMSE) 和可接受的预测区 (APZ) 分别评估模型预测的准确性和可接受性。总的来说,在波动温度条件下,与洋葱(RMSE 为 0.42 至 1.53)相比,芹菜(RMSE 为 0.28 至 0.47)的李斯特菌生长预测更为准确。然而,对于芹菜和洋葱,两种预测都产生了 APZ 值,范围分别为 82%至 100%和 36%至 78%。相比之下,肠炎沙门氏菌在研究的三种波动温度方案下在切块番茄中的数量增加了 1 个以上的对数 CFU/g。总的来说,与在被动改良气氛中储存的产品相比,在高氧气氛下包装的这些切块产品显示出减少了病原体的生长。本研究的结果将特别有助于评估食用切块芹菜、番茄和洋葱的风险,并设计有效的包装策略,以最大限度地减少新鲜切割产品中病原体的生长。