Affiliation: | aDepartment of Hygiene, Technology and Control of Food and Foodstuffs, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Trakia University, 6000 Stara Zagora, Bulgaria bDepartment of Animal Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523-1171, USA |
Abstract: | To assess the effect of including contaminated rework on survival and growth of Listeria monocytogenes, two sausage formulations (one American, Bologna sausage; and one Bulgarian, Stranja sausage) were inoculated with the pathogen and stored for 4 days at 10 °C plus 15 h at 30 °C. After storage, both rework types were included (at 20% and 40%) in corresponding fresh sausage emulsions and heated to 68, 70 and 71.7 °C; fresh Bologna and Stranja emulsions served as controls and were inoculated with 24 h broth cultures of the same 10-strain mixture of L. monocytogenes and thermally treated to the same temperatures. The results showed that heating to 68 and 70 °C inactivated 3–4 log CFU/g of the initial concentration of L. monocytogenes cells (>7 log CFU/g), while heat treatment to 71.7 °C in the center of experimental samples reduced counts by 6 log CFU/g. Survival of L. monocytogenes in samples heated to 68 and 70 °C was higher in controls. Control samples of Stranja emulsion heated to 71.7 °C allowed higher growth (P < 0.05) during storage (5 days at 10 °C) as compared to other control and experimental rework samples. The Stranja emulsion had a higher fat content (20.2%) compared to the Bologna emulsion (11%). This study provides evidence about the possible danger when potentially contaminated rework is stored and then introduced into fresh product formulations. |