This study investigated the survival and acid tolerance of Listeria monocytogenes during the 2-day processing stage and 90- day ripening of Savak tulum cheese, a traditional cheese in Turkey. Experimental Savak tulum cheese was produced from raw sheep's milk that was inoculated with a L. monocytogenes mixture consisting of five strains (average 7.0 log CFU/ml) and was ripened at 6°C for 90 days. Microbiological and chemical analyses and acid exposure experiments in synthetic gastric fluid (SGF) (pH 1.5 to 2.5) were carried out on days 1 and 2 during processing and on days 0, 15, 30, 45, 60, and 90 during ripening. The numbers of L. monocytogenes did not decrease during processing, but a total of 4.1 log CFU/g reduction was observed during ripening. Throughout the ripening period, L. monocytogenes cells survived direct 90-min exposures of the cheese samples to SGF. These results suggest that, although the pathogen numbers decreased in Savak tulum cheese ripened at 6°C for 90 days, a sublethal environment may have occurred in the cheese during the production stage, activating the acid-tolerance mechanisms of the pathogen and allowing L. monocytogenes to maintain its viability in the SGF for 90 min. Copyright © International Association for Food Protection.
CITATION STYLE
Dikici, A., & Calicioglu, M. (2013). Survival of Listeria monocytogenes during production and ripening of traditional Turkish Savak Tulum cheese and in synthetic gastric fluid. Journal of Food Protection, 76(10), 1801–1805. https://doi.org/10.4315/0362-028X.JFP-13-016
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