THE RATES OF GROWTH OF SOME THERMODURIC BACTERIA IN PURE CULTURE AND THEIR EFFECTS ON TESTS FOR THE KEEPING QUALITY OF MILK |
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Authors: | D. J. WILLIAMS |
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Affiliation: | Seale-Hayne Agricultural College, Newton Abbot, Devon |
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Abstract: | SUMMARY: The growth rates of eleven representative thermoduric bacteria, comprising 3 aerobic spore formers, 3 streptococci, 1 Corynebacterium lacticum and 4 micrococci, have been determined in glucose broth and sterile pasteurized milk at 37·5°, 26° and 15°. The spore formers and streptococci were generally not affected by the presence of inhibitory factors in pasteurized milk. When multiplication of micrococci and C. lacticum occurred in milk this was only after a lag period. One micrococcus showed an unusual series of growth phases in glucose broth at 37·5°, possibly due to the appearance of mutants or to adaptation of the organism to growth at that temperature. This was not observed in pasteurized milk. C. lacticum died off when incubated in glucose broth at 37·5°. None of the keeping quality tests was more effective than any other in detecting these organisms in milk. The micrococci and C. lacticum had little effect on the keeping quality of pasteurized milk within the period of 'commercial life'. Some of the spore formers and streptococci showed marked differences in the end-points with the clot-on-boiling and the alcohol precipitation tests. |
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