Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1266325 Procedia Food Science 2015 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

Individual components of a traditional meat jelly (cooked meat chunks, gelatin and preboiled vegetable) with differences in pH and aw can constitute a niche for the multiplication of Listeria. Listeria monocytogenes counts remained stable in jelly over 21 days at 2 and 8 °C, whereas in meat and vegetables, a >1 log10 unit increase was observed after 7 days at 2 °C (or >5 log10 at 8 °C). In the composed product, Listeria numbers remained stable at 2 °C (21 days), but increased more than 1 log10 during 7 days at 8 °C. Improving safety of jellied meat by lowering pH is discussed.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Chemistry (General)