Fung Daniel Y C, Cunningham F E
Department of Animal Sciences and Industry, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506.
J Food Prot. 1980 Aug;43(8):641-650. doi: 10.4315/0362-028X-43.8.641.
Microwave cooking has increased in popularity in recent years. Since the time to process food is much shorter than with conventional methods, questions have been raised as to the microbial safety of foods cooked with microwaves. The first part of this review includes discussions on the importance of intrinsic and extrinsic characteristics of foods in relation to destruction of microorganisms in microwave-cooked foods, the mechanism of microwave destruction of microorganisms and viewpoints on the thermal and nonthermal destruction of microorganisms. The second part includes data on the effect of time and temperature on microorganisms in microwave-cooked foods, the effect of microwave destruction of microorganisms in different food systems and the effect of microwaves on different bacteria. The last section includes discussions of destruction of microorganisms by microwave cooking of meats, poultry and egg products, dairy products, cereal products, fruit products, vegetables and miscellaneous foods. We observed that (a) microwave heating of food is more "food dependent" than conventional heating, (b) the manufacturer-recommended microwave treatment time for some foods may not destroy high levels of bacteria, (c) use of microwaves in combination with other conventional heating methods results in more uniform heating in foods and destruction of bacteria, (d) heat generated by microwaves kills naturally-occurring microorganisms as long as the size and type of food are carefully correlated with exposure time, (e) microwaves exert different killing effects on individual bacterial species and (f) the question of thermal versus nonthermal effects of microwaves on microorganisms has not been settled. We believe microwave heating is an important method for processing of foods at home, in institutions and in commercial operations. The process is acceptable from the standpoint of food spoilage and food safety as long as the users understand the limitations and possibilities of microwave heating and are aware of some of the major points presented in this review.
近年来,微波烹饪越来越受欢迎。由于加工食物的时间比传统方法短得多,因此人们对用微波烹饪的食物的微生物安全性提出了疑问。本综述的第一部分包括讨论食物的内在和外在特性在微波烹饪食物中与微生物破坏相关的重要性、微波破坏微生物的机制以及关于微生物热破坏和非热破坏的观点。第二部分包括关于时间和温度对微波烹饪食物中微生物的影响、微波在不同食物体系中对微生物的破坏作用以及微波对不同细菌的影响的数据。最后一部分包括讨论通过微波烹饪肉类、禽肉和蛋类产品、乳制品、谷物产品、水果产品、蔬菜及其他各类食物对微生物的破坏情况。我们观察到:(a)食物的微波加热比传统加热更“依赖食物本身”;(b)一些食物制造商推荐的微波处理时间可能无法杀灭大量细菌;(c)将微波与其他传统加热方法结合使用可使食物加热更均匀并杀灭细菌;(d)只要食物的大小和类型与暴露时间仔细匹配,微波产生的热量就能杀死天然存在的微生物;(e)微波对不同细菌种类有不同的杀灭效果;(f)微波对微生物的热效应与非热效应问题尚未解决。我们认为微波加热是家庭、机构和商业操作中加工食物的一种重要方法。只要使用者了解微波加热的局限性和可能性,并知晓本综述中提出的一些要点,从食物变质和食品安全的角度来看,这个过程是可以接受的。