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Microbial spoilage of portuguese chouriço along shelf life period

Abstract

Microbial flora of portuguese chouriço (Alentejano (A) and Ribatejano (R)) with abnormal sensorial characteristics along shelf life was studied. Mesophilic anaerobic bacteria, enterococci, mesophilic sporeformers, coliforms, coagulase-positive staphylococci, sulphite reducing clostridia, Clostridium perfringens, moulds and yeasts were the most representative in both types of chouriço.

spoilage microbial flora; Abnormal sensorial characteristics; Portuguese chouriço; Returned product


FOOD MICROBIOLOGY

SHORT COMMUNICATION

Microbial spoilage of portuguese chouriço along shelf life period

Teresa de Jesus da Silva MatosI; Arminda Bruno-SoaresI; António Amaral AzevedoII

IInstituto Superior de Agronomia, Tapada da Ajuda, Lisboa, Portugal

IIEscola Superior Agrária de Santarém, Quinta do Galinheiro, Santarém, Portugal

Send correspondence to Send correspondence to: T.J.S. Matos Instituto Superior de Agronomia, Departamento de Ciências e Engenharia de Biossistemas, Tapada da Ajuda 1349-017 Lisboa, Portugal E-mail: matosteresa@isa.utl.pt

ABSTRACT

Microbial flora of portuguese chouriço (Alentejano (A) and Ribatejano (R)) with abnormal sensorial characteristics along shelf life was studied. Mesophilic anaerobic bacteria, enterococci, mesophilic sporeformers, coliforms, coagulase-positive staphylococci, sulphite reducing clostridia, Clostridium perfringens, moulds and yeasts were the most representative in both types of chouriço.

Key words: spoilage microbial flora, Abnormal sensorial characteristics, Portuguese chouriço, Returned product.

Portuguese dry smoked sausage -chouriço -is a meat product with sui generis characteristics. The nutritional value, the long shelf life period (120 days) and the processing technology make it a very well accepted and consumed product in Portugal. Portuguese chouriço is intensively smoked through the combustion of hard wood (cork tree and holm oak) (Matos et al., 2008) and is considered a shelf stable product at temperature of 20± 5 ºC (Matos et al., 2007). However, chouriço with abnormal sensorial characteristics may occur along shelf life period (Matos et al., 2005). Product loses the marketability and it is normal practice to return it to the processing industry which will credit the client by the corresponding value. Problems such as the potential risk for the public health; the industry "brand image" depreciation; the compromised market position and economic losses are of great concern. In order to prevent these problems it is extremely important to study which factors have influence on the stability of the product to ensure the foregoing quality and safety of the meat product during the producer-defined shelf life period. In this context it was evaluated the microbial flora of two types of Portuguese dry smoked sausage, chouriço type Alentejano and type Ribatejano, which were returned to the meat processing industry along shelf life period (packaged in modified atmosphere, 45% CO2 / 55% N2, and kept at 20 ± 5 ºC) with abnormal sensorial characteristics (colour and texture changes, fungi development, slime and drip loss).

The experiments were conducted in a large meat plant certified according ISO 22000 (ISO 22000, 2005) standard. Two types of Portuguese smoked dry sausage (Alentejano, A and Ribatejano, R) were studied. The recipe of these chouriços consisted in pork, red pepper paste, water, salt, garlic paste, olive oil, spices, sugar, liquid smoke, additives (sodium nitrite, E250 and commercial sausage sodium polyphosphate, E452(i)) for type A, and pork, red pepper paste, water, salt, garlic paste, spices, white wine, sugar, liquid smoke, additives (sodium nitrite, E250 and commercial sausage sodium polyphosphate, E452(i)) for type R. Pork meat and fat were minced (± 20 mm) and mixed with the formulation ingredients. The batter was stuffed into salted pork intestine (Ribatejano type sausage) and into beef dry casing (Alentejano type sausage) and then dried and smoked for about three days (weight loss ca 40%). The thermal treatment was divided in two phases. First phase was conducted in a smoke chamber with temperature, relative humidity (RH) and smoke addition automatically controlled. This first phase included 1) 60 min at 50 ºC, 2) 90 min at 53 ºC and 3) 90 min at 55 ºC. During these treatments smoke was given continuously. In the second phase, product was submitted to one traditional chimney at the same industry in which smoke was produced from firewood (oak wood). The product was stabilised for one day at 17-19 ºC and at 75-85% (RH) before packaging.

Final product was packaged separately in modified atmosphere with 45% of CO2 and 55% of N2. Package material was a Combitherm film, 70-300 mm, PA/EVOH/PE/SY - coextruded, laminate [EVOH (ethylene vinyl alcohol), PE (polyethylene) and PA (polyamide polymer)]. Shelf life period was defined as 120 days at 20 ± 5 ºC. The study was based in 60 samples (27 from product A and 33 from product type R), each sample was composed by a mixture of three sausages (a total of 180 sausages) randomly drawn from those sausages which returned to the industry with abnormal sensorial characteristics. Samples were not peeled for the accomplished analysis.

Microbial analyses were performed in triplicate. Each sample was prepared from three sausages. Twenty five grams were removed (approximately 8.33 g from each sausage) and mixed into 225 mL of Peptone water (Merck; 7228). Ten fold dilutions were prepared taking 1 mL from the previous dilution into 9 mL in an 0.85% solution of sodium chloride (Merck, 6404). For the enumeration of moulds and yeasts 0.5-mL samples from the dilution tubes were spread onto selective media rose bengal chloramphenicol agar base (RBC; CM549, Oxoid, Basingstoke, UK) supplemented with chloramphenicol (SR78E, Oxoid) and incubated aerobically at 25 ºC for 5 days according to official Portuguese standards (NP 2077, 1985). For the enumeration of mesophylic anaerobic bacteria, 1 mL samples from the dilution tubes (previously heated to 80 ºC for 10 min) were inoculated onto COLID (BioMerieux) and incubated for 5 days at 30 ºC (NP 2262, 1986). Search analysis of Clostridium perfringens, sulphite reducing Clostridia and coagulase-positive staphylococci were performed according Portuguese Standard Methods (NP 2260, 1986; NP 2261, 1986; NP 2262, 1986). For search analysis of Enterococcus was used ADB medium (Merck 1.01590) incubated at 37 ºC for 24 hours with confirmation in VAB (Difco 0606-01-7) at 37 ºC for 48 hours; search analysis of coliforms and E. coli were performed in COLID medium (BioMerieux) after 48 hours of incubation at 37 ºC . Viable counts were calculated as log CFU (mean ± standard deviation, n = 3). Results of search analysis were reported as the number of samples containing positive results (presence of the organism).

In samples of chouriço R, mesophilic anaerobic bacteria constituted the predominant group, present in 100% of the samples with mean values between 2.96 and 7.63 log cfu/g of sample (Figure 1). For chouriço type A, besides the microbial group of mesophilic anaerobic bacteria, moulds were also observed in 100% of the samples (Figure 1). For these microbial groups, mean values (log cfu/g of sample) oscillated between 4.48 and 7.76 and between 1.56 and 6.19, respectively. Yeasts presented a frequency of 36.4% in chouriço type R and of 33.3% in A type. From all samples with abnormal sensorial characteristics the predominant flora was mesophylic anaerobic bacteria and in second place moulds. These results could be related with the presence of lactic acid bacteria which is the predominant anaerobic flora (data not shown). Product fermentation promotes the growth of lactic acid bacteria but the presence of moulds and yeasts could indicate package rupture or film permeability to the oxygen. In the present study, yeast counts revealed almost inexistent, only in samples with 57, 60, 68 and 90 days of shelf life for product R and, in samples with 53, 59 and 82 days of shelf life for sausage type A values were detected (Figure 1). These results are in agreement with the results founded by Matos et al. (2007) in Portuguese chouriços. Encinas et al. (2000) also reported in Spanish fermented smoked sausages mean values of yeast counts lower than in non-smoked sausage types and, among all varieties studied by these authors, the lowest mean value founded in sausages hot-smoked was of 16 cfug while in other types of sausages (not-smoked) mean values varied from 1000 to 100000 cfu/g. Smoke does affect yeasts (Leistner, 1995), and factors such as time and temperature influence this effect. Inhibitory effect of garlic on yeasts was reported by Ghamnnoum (1990).


Search analyses, in both types of product, revealed enterococci and mesophilic sporeformers as the predominant microbial groups, with positive results in 100% of the samples (Table 1). In what concerns coliforms, values were superior in chouriço type R (positive results in 24.2% of the samples). In chouriço type A were observed positive results only in 11.1% of the samples. Escherichia coli was detected only in one sample of chouriço type R. For coagulase-positive staphylococci, sulphite reducing clostridia and Clostridium perfringens frequencies of 48%, 63% and 25.9%, respectively, in chouriço type A, and of 51.5%, 33.3% and 15.2% in chouriço type R, were observed.

Enterococci occur and may compete well in fermented sausages. Opinions about their significance vary as enterococci may enhance sausage aroma and taste by their proteolytic activities, but may also compromise safety if opportunistic pathogenic strains proliferate (Holley et al., 1988). The role of enterococci in Portuguese smoked sausages should be evaluated. Prevalence of staphylococci coagulase-positive was founded in 30 samples (17 samples of R and 13 samples of A sausage). The presence of coliforms and E. coli can be explained by the handling of the paste and the stuffing procedure into natural guts. Clostridium perfringens and sulphite reducing clostridia were present in 15.2% and in 33.3% for product type R, respectively and, in 25.9% and in 63% of the samples for product type A, respectively. In conclusion, the presence of pathogenic groups represents a health hazard to the consumers in Portugal and reinforced the need to implement urgent measures in meat processing industries and also in market points regarding the stability and safety of these meat products along shelf life period. Factors such as the thermal process, the storage temperature along shelf life, the substitution of natural casings and the final product handling should be considered and improved. However, further studies should be carried out in order to investigate the influence of the normal house flora (useful and noxious) on shelf life and on the applied packaging technology of these types of Portuguese meat products. Storage conditions at market points should also be evaluated.

Submitted: February 09, 2011

Approved: September 30, 2012.

All the content of the journal, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons License CC BY-NC.

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  • Send correspondence to:

    T.J.S. Matos
    Instituto Superior de Agronomia, Departamento de Ciências e Engenharia de Biossistemas, Tapada da Ajuda
    1349-017 Lisboa, Portugal
    E-mail:
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      13 June 2013
    • Date of issue
      2013

    History

    • Received
      09 Feb 2011
    • Accepted
      30 Sept 2012
    Sociedade Brasileira de Microbiologia USP - ICB III - Dep. de Microbiologia, Sociedade Brasileira de Microbiologia, Av. Prof. Lineu Prestes, 2415, Cidade Universitária, 05508-900 São Paulo, SP - Brasil, Ramal USP 7979, Tel. / Fax: (55 11) 3813-9647 ou 3037-7095 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
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