Smith Anne M, Evans David A, Buck Ernest M
Department of Food Science and Nutrition, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003.
J Food Prot. 1981 Jan;44(1):9-14. doi: 10.4315/0362-028X-44.1.9.
The low-temperature, long-time cooking of beef, using either a water bath or a conventional oven, resulted in partial inactivation of Clostridium perfringens vegetative cells. Beef roasts were cooked in a water bath for process times calculated to inactivate low and high levels of C. perfringens vegetative cells. Cooking beef in a water bath to an internal temperature of 60 C and holding for at least 12 min, as required by the USDA, reduced a population of C. perfringens by approximately 3 log cycles. To decrease the risk of subsequent outgrowth of C. perfringens , roasts (⩽ 1.5 kg) may be subjected to a process calculated for a 12-log reduction in population, which would include holding times of 2.3 h or longer at an internal temperature of 60 C. Recommendations are given for cooking and cooling roasts to minimize microbiological problems.