Contamination levels of Clostridium estertheticum spores that result in gaseous spoilage of vacuum‐packaged chilled beef and lamb meat |
| |
Authors: | R.M. Clemens K.H. Adam G. Brightwell |
| |
Affiliation: | Food Safety FMM, AgResearch, Ruakura Campus, Hamilton, New Zealand |
| |
Abstract: | Aims: To determine the contamination levels of Cl. estertheticum spores that result in gaseous spoilage of vacuum‐packaged chilled meats, beef and lamb, stored at two different temperatures, ?1·5 and 2°C. Methods and Results: The study consisted of two separate trials using the same processing parameters applied to beef and lamb at two different storage temperatures and six different inoculation concentrations of Cl. estertheticum. A threshold for pack blowing of c. 1 spore per vacuum pack was seen with both beef and lamb stored at ?1·5 and 2°C. These results highlight the detrimental effect that increasing Cl. estertheticum spore inoculum concentration has on the onset of blown pack spoilage for both meat species stored at ?1·5 and 2°C. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that storage temperature is an extremely important parameter influencing the onset of blown pack spoilage and that storing meat at ?1·5°C significantly delays the onset of blown pack spoilage in comparison with storage at 2°C. Significance and Impact of study: The results of this study indicate that 1 Cl. estertheticum spore may present a risk of spoilage, and thus hygienic carcass dressing is critical to keep contamination to a minimum and maximize storage life of the vacuum‐packed chilled product. |
| |
Keywords: | clostridia meat spoilage vacuum‐packaged chilled meats |
|
|