Journal
FOOD CONTROL
Volume 32, Issue 1, Pages 159-167Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodcont.2012.11.036
Keywords
Food preservation; E. coli O157:H7; Heat; Pulsed electric fields; Carvacrol; Juices
Categories
Funding
- CICYT [AGL 2009-11660]
- Fondo Social Europeo, Departamento de Ciencia, Tecnologia y Universidad (Gobierno de Aragon)
- AECID
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This work has evaluated the bactericidal effect of carvacrol in combination with mild heat or pulsed electric fields (PEF) treatments to describe the treatment conditions needed to inactivate 5 log(10) cycles of Escherichia coli O57:H7 cells suspended in apple, mango, orange, and tomato juices. Strong synergistic lethal effects were shown using mild heat (54 degrees C and 60 degrees C) or PEF (30 kV/cm) treatments combined with 1.3 mM of carvacrol. In relation to combinations of heat and carvacrol, the time to inactivate 5 log(10) cycles of E. coli O157:H7 decreased, on average, by a 75% in apple, mango and tomato juice, and by a 84% in orange juice, or alternatively treatment temperature might be decreased up to 5 degrees C. With regards to PEF, while 50 exponential decay pulses at 30 kV/cm caused less than 1 log(10) cell cycle reduction, the combination with carvacrol caused the inactivation of 5 log(10) cell cycles by the application of 20-50 pulses as a function of the juice. The reduction of microbial contamination to 2 x 10(4) cells/ml allowed us to diminish the addition of carvacrol from 1.3 to the range of 0.21-0.58 mM while maintaining the synergistic effect in combination with heat or PEF. The synergism observed offers a great potential to improve traditional heat treatments by reducing treatment intensity and, thus, undesirable effects on food quality, as well as novel PEF treatments by increasing microbial inactivation in acid foods. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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