Decontamination treatments for psychrotrophic microorganisms on chicken meat during storage at different temperatures

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Abstract

The antimicrobial effectiveness of five chemical decontaminants (12% trisodium phosphate [TSP], 1,200 ppm acidified sodium chlorite [ASC], 2% citric acid [CA], 220 ppm of peroxyacids [PA], or 50 ppm of chlorine dioxide [CD]) against psychrotrophic populations on skinned chicken legs was assessed throughout 120 h of storage under various temperature abuse scenarios. Three different simulated cold chain disruptions were used: T1 (12 h at 1 ± 1°C, 6 h at 15 ± 1°C, and 102 h at 4 ± 1°C), T2 (18 h at 1 ± 1°C, 6 h at 15 ± 1°C, and 96 h at 10 ± 1°C), or T3 (18 h at 4 ± 1°C, 6 h at 20 ± 1°C, and 96 h at 7 ± 1°C). Microbiological analyses were carried out at 0, 24, 72, and 120 h of storage. Substantial microbial reductions, with respect to control (untreated) samples, were obtained in legs treated with TSP, ASC, and CA, with average values ranging from 1.54 ± 1.52 to 2.02 ± 2.19 log CFU/cm2. TSP was the most effective compound under mild abuse temperature conditions (T1), with mean reductions of 2.01 ± 1.67 log CFU/cm2, whereas ASC, followed by CA, proved to be particularly useful under moderate abuse conditions (T3; average reductions of 2.99±2.27 and 1.98±1.65 log CFU/cm2, respectively). Treatment with PA or CD resulted in minimal microbial reductions. © International Association for Food Protection.

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Alonso-Hernando, A., Capita, R., & Alonso-Calleja, C. (2013). Decontamination treatments for psychrotrophic microorganisms on chicken meat during storage at different temperatures. Journal of Food Protection, 76(11), 1977–1980. https://doi.org/10.4315/0362-028X.JFP-13-175

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