Effects of Packaging Methods on the Microbial Flora of Livers and Kidneys from Beef or Pork

  • Hanna M
  • Smith G
  • Savell J
  • et al.
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Abstract

Aerobic plate counts (APC) of vacuum-packaged beef livers, beef kidneys and pork livers during refrigerated storage were nearly always, particularly after 14 days at 2 C, much lower than those of comparable samples packaged in polyvinyl chloride (PVC) film. The pH of vacuum-packaged livers and kidneys decreased during refrigerated storage; the same was true for products stored in PVC film except that the pH of kidneys increased. In refrigerated vacuum-packaged livers and kidneys, lactic acid bacteria (homo- and heterofermentative lactobacilli, streptococci, Leuconostoc sp.) became more predominant, whereas in products packaged in PVC film, gram-negative bacteria frequently became more dominant.

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Hanna, M. O., Smith, G. C., Savell, J. W., Mckeith, F. K., & Vanderzant, C. (1982). Effects of Packaging Methods on the Microbial Flora of Livers and Kidneys from Beef or Pork. Journal of Food Protection, 45(1), 74–81. https://doi.org/10.4315/0362-028x-45.1.74

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