Occurrence, distribution and contamination levels of heat-resistant moulds throughout the processing of pasteurized high-acid fruit products
Heat-resistant moulds (HRMs) are well known for their ability to survive pasteurization and spoil high-acid food products, which is of great concern for processors of fruit-based products worldwide. Whilst the majority of the studies on HRMs over the last decades have addressed their inactivation, few data are currently available regarding their contamination levels in fruit and fruit-based products. Thus, this study aimed to quantify and identify heat-resistant fungal ascospores from samples collected throughout the processing of pasteurized high-acid fruit products. In addition, an assessmen... Mehr ...
Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Dokumenttyp: | Artikel |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 2018 |
Verlag/Hrsg.: |
Elsevier B.V.
|
Schlagwörter: | Fruit product / Neosartorya / strawberry / Talaromyces / Ascomycetes / Belgium / Brazil / food control / food handling / Fragaria / fruit and vegetable juice / fungus spore / fruit / Ascospores / Incidence / Processing / Spoilage / Statistical distribution / apple / Article / ascospore / Aspergillus / Aspergillus fumigatus / Byssochlamys / Byssochlamys fulva / Byssochlamys nivea / contamination / food processing / gene sequence / heat resistant mould / mould / nonhuman / orange juice / pasteurization / quantitative analysis / risk assessment / heat / isolation and purification / Malus / microbiology / Netherlands / physiology / Ascomycota / Food Microbiology / Fruit and Vegetable Juices / Hot Temperature / Spores |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Permalink: | https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29182002 |
Datenquelle: | BASE; Originalkatalog |
Powered By: | BASE |
Link(s) : | https://hdl.handle.net/11499/10655 |
Heat-resistant moulds (HRMs) are well known for their ability to survive pasteurization and spoil high-acid food products, which is of great concern for processors of fruit-based products worldwide. Whilst the majority of the studies on HRMs over the last decades have addressed their inactivation, few data are currently available regarding their contamination levels in fruit and fruit-based products. Thus, this study aimed to quantify and identify heat-resistant fungal ascospores from samples collected throughout the processing of pasteurized high-acid fruit products. In addition, an assessment on the effect of processing on the contamination levels of HRMs in these products was carried out. A total of 332 samples from 111 batches were analyzed from three processing plants (=three processing lines): strawberry puree (n = 88, Belgium), concentrated orange juice (n = 90, Brazil) and apple puree (n = 154, the Netherlands). HRMs were detected in 96.4% (107/111) of the batches and 59.3% (197/332) of the analyzed samples. HRMs were present in 90.9% of the samples from the strawberry puree processing line (1–215 ascospores/100 g), 46.7% of the samples from the orange juice processing line (1–200 ascospores/100 g) and 48.7% of samples from the apple puree processing line (1–84 ascospores/100 g). Despite the high occurrence, the majority (76.8%, 255/332) of the samples were either not contaminated or presented low levels of HRMs (10 ascospores/100 g). For both strawberry puree and concentrated orange juice, processing had no statistically significant effect on the levels of HRMs (p > 0.05). On the contrary, a significant reduction (p 0.05) in HRMs levels was observed during the processing of apple puree. Twelve species were identified belonging to four genera - Byssochlamys, Aspergillus with Neosartorya-type ascospores, Talaromyces and Rasamsonia. N. fumigata (23.6%), N. fischeri (19.1%) and B. nivea (5.5%) were the predominant species in pasteurized products. The quantitative data (contamination levels of HRMs) ...