4.7 Article

Postharvest Reduction of Salmonella enterica on Tomatoes Using a Pelargonic Acid Emulsion

Journal

FOODS
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods10010178

Keywords

produce safety; postharvest wash; sanitizer; chlorine; peroxyacetic acid

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The novel produce wash containing PEL emulsions effectively reduced contaminated Salmonella on tomatoes and mitigated subsequent cross-contamination, but had a negative impact on tomato texture. Organic load did not affect the efficacy of the sanitizer across all treatments.
A novel produce wash consisting of pelargonic acid (PEL) emulsions was tested on tomatoes contaminated with a five-serovar Salmonella enterica cocktail. Ability to reduce contamination on the inoculated tomato surface, as well as mitigation of subsequent cross-contamination to uninoculated tomatoes washed in re-used/spent wash water were examined. Sanitizer efficacy was also examined over 1 and 7 d storage time (8 degrees C, recommended for red ripe tomatoes) and in the presence of 0.5% (w/v) organic load. PEL performed statistically the same (p <= 0.05) at both 30 mM and 50 mM concentrations and resulted in greater than 1, 5 and 6 log CFU/g Salmonella reductions at 0 h, 1 d and 7 d, respectively, when compared to a water-only or no rinse (NR) treatment. This was also a significantly greater reduction than was observed due to chlorine (sodium hypochlorite) and peroxyacetic acid (PAA) at all time points (p <= 0.01). Organic load had no impact on sanitizer efficacy for all examined treatments. Finally, PEL had a deleterious impact on tomato texture. At 1 d, ca. 5 N and 7 N were required to achieve tomato skin penetration and compression, respectively, compared to >9 N and 15 N required by all other treatments (p <= 0.05). While PEL sanitizers effectively reduced inoculated Salmonella and subsequent transfer to uninoculated tomatoes, reformulation may be necessary to prevent deleterious quality impacts on produce.

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