Liu Xiyang, Grasso-Kelley Elizabeth M, Lee Alvin, Warda Lilybell, Anderson Nathan M
Institute for Food Safety and Health/Department of Food Science and Nutrition, Illinois Institute of Technology, 6502 South Archer Road, Bedford Park, IL 60501, United States.
U.S. Food and Drug Administration, 6502 South Archer Road, Bedford Park, IL 60501, United States.
J Food Prot. 2025 Aug 11;88(10):100597. doi: 10.1016/j.jfp.2025.100597.
Dried fruit has been linked to recalls and outbreaks due to microbiological hazards. While most drying processes are optimized for product quality, microbiological safety may not always be prioritized. The food industry is required to validate process preventive controls to ensure they significantly minimize or prevent microbial hazards. This study aimed to evaluate the combined effects of temperature, drying bed depth, and air velocity on the inactivation of Salmonella on apple cubes. A cocktail of six Salmonella serovars was inoculated onto fresh Gala apple cubes (∼0.256 cm). A single layer of Salmonella-inoculated apple cubes was dyed red and placed atop un-inoculated cubes in a drying chamber to achieve final bed depths of 5.1, 8.9, or 12.7 cm. Apple cubes were dried at 88, 104, or 120 °C with air velocities of 2.10, 2.95, or 3.82 m/s. At multiple time points (n ≥ 5), samples were collected from the inoculated, dyed apple cubes on the top layer for water activity measurement and Salmonella enumeration. Across all drying conditions, an initial stable stage of apple a and Salmonella populations was observed with varying durations followed by a rapid decrease in both. The overall effect of drying temperature, bed depth, and air velocity on microbial inactivation followed a consistent pattern: Higher temperature reduced the drying time required to achieve comparable Salmonella reductions as elevated product temperature enhanced microbial inactivation. Similarly, lower bed depth allowed the thinner apple layers to reach higher temperatures more rapidly, accelerating microbial reduction. Increased air velocity shortened the constant-rate drying period, promoted a faster temperature increase in the apple cubes, and resulted in higher lethality within a shorter drying period. Although a 5-log reduction of Salmonella was achieved at the end of drying under all but one condition, the reductions were reached at varying endpoint water activity levels.
由于微生物危害,果干曾与召回事件及疫情爆发有关联。虽然大多数干燥工艺是针对产品质量进行优化的,但微生物安全性可能并非总是被优先考虑。食品行业需要验证过程预防控制措施,以确保它们能显著降低或预防微生物危害。本研究旨在评估温度、干燥床深度和风速对苹果块上沙门氏菌灭活的综合影响。将六种沙门氏菌血清型的混合菌液接种到新鲜的嘎啦苹果块(约0.256厘米)上。将单层接种了沙门氏菌的苹果块染成红色,并放置在干燥室内未接种的苹果块之上,以达到最终床深5.1、8.9或12.7厘米。苹果块在88、104或120℃下干燥,风速为2.10、2.95或3.82米/秒。在多个时间点(n≥5),从顶层接种并染色的苹果块中采集样本,用于测定水分活度和计数沙门氏菌。在所有干燥条件下,均观察到苹果水分活度和沙门氏菌数量最初有一个持续时间不同的稳定阶段,随后两者均迅速下降。干燥温度、床深和风速对微生物灭活的总体影响遵循一致模式:较高温度减少了达到可比沙门氏菌减少量所需的干燥时间,因为产品温度升高会增强微生物灭活。同样,较低的床深使较薄的苹果层能更快达到更高温度,加速微生物减少。风速增加缩短了恒速干燥期,促进苹果块更快升温,并在更短的干燥期内导致更高的致死率。尽管在除一种情况外的所有条件下,干燥结束时沙门氏菌均实现了5个对数级的减少,但减少量是在不同的终点水分活度水平下达到的。