| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8252145 | Radiation Physics and Chemistry | 2017 | 15 Pages | 
Abstract
												The feasibility of extending the shelf-life of a squid product by gamma irradiation was analyzed. Illex argentinus rings were irradiated at 4 and 8 kGy; and stored at 4±1 °C during 77 days. No mesophilic bacteria, enterobacteriaceae and coliforms were detected in irradiated rings during storage. Psychrotrophic bacteria were significantly reduced by irradiation; their counts were fitted to a growth model which was further used for shelf-life estimations: 3 and 27 days for 0 and 4 kGy, respectively. Initially, non-irradiated as well as irradiated rings had very good sensory scores. The overall acceptability of 4 and 8 kGy rings did not decrease during 27 and 64 days, respectively, while control samples spoiled after 3 days. A radiation dose range for squid rings preservation was defined, which attained the technological shelf-life extension objective, without impairing sensory quality.
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													Physical Sciences and Engineering
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											Authors
												Alejandra Tomac, MarÃa C. Cova, Patricia Narvaiz, MarÃa I. Yeannes, 
											