首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


MICROBIAL QUALITY OF FRESH‐CUT ICEBERG LETTUCE WASHED IN WARM OR COLD WATER AND IRRADIATED IN A MODIFIED ATMOSPHERE PACKAGE*
Authors:KATHLEEN T RAJKOWSKI  XUETONG FAN
Affiliation:United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service
Eastern Regional Research Center
600 E. Mermaid Lane, Wyndmoor, PA 19038
Abstract:

ABSTRACT

The microbial keeping quality of fresh‐cut iceberg lettuce was determined after being washed in either cold water (5C) for 3 min or warm water (47C) for 2 min followed by a cold water rinse (5C) and packaged in a modified atmosphere film bag. The lettuce samples were treated with gamma radiation to 0, 1 or 2 kGy while maintaining a refrigerated temperature (4C). The samples were analyzed for total aerobic, total coliform and Enterobacteriaceae counts after refrigerated storage up to 12 days. No difference in aerobic counts was observed between the hot‐ and cold‐washed samples immediately after washing. The coliform and Enterobacteriaceae counts were reduced by 2 log after the warm water wash and no difference for the cold water‐washed sample. The irradiation treatment at 1 kGy reduced the aerobic, coliform and Enterobacteriaceae counts by 2 log for the warm‐washed samples. At the 2‐kGy treatment level, the aerobic and coliform counts were reduced by 3 log for the cold‐washed lettuce, whereas the Enterobacteriaceae counts were reduced by only 2 log. The observed log reductions in bacterial counts after irradiation were maintained for 12 days when stored at 4C. The combination of a cold water wash and irradiation to 2 kGy had the best microbial keeping quality.

PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS

Fresh‐cut lettuce, when washed in either cold or warm water, shows neither an appreciable removal of the microbial load nor a significant increase in the keeping quality when compared with unwashed fresh‐cut controls. Placing the washed lettuce into modified atmosphere packaging (MAP) did not lessen the overall bacteriologic load, and after 12 days of storage at 4C, the microbial counts increased. However, gamma irradiation of the washed, MAP‐stored lettuce to a dose of 2 kGy significantly reduces the overall microbe count, thereby increasing both the shelf life and the safety of the produce. A 2‐kGy dose of gamma irradiation provides a pathogen‐free, long shelf life, fresh‐cut lettuce that is bacteriologically safer and sensorially indistinguishable from bagged, nonirradiated, fresh‐cut lettuce.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号