E. Nerbrink et E. Borch, EVALUATION OF BACTERIAL-CONTAMINATION AT SEPARATE PROCESSING STAGES IN EMULSION SAUSAGE PRODUCTION, International journal of food microbiology, 20(1), 1993, pp. 37-44
The contamination with spoilage bacteria at separate production steps
during the production of emulsion sausages was evaluated using a speci
al sampling and evaluation method. Heat processed and chilled sausages
were aseptically transferred directly to cold storage, cutting down o
r packing. Upon completion of the particular production step the sausa
ges were vacuum-packed and stored at 8-degrees-C. During storage, the
microbial growth of the sausages was followed and the area under the p
lot of aerobic count versus storage time was calculated. No correlatio
n was found between the total aerobic count of unstored samples and ba
cterial growth during storage, defined as area under growth curves. Fu
rthermore, the count of lactic acid bacteria on unstored sausages was
often below the detection limit. However, the area reflected the exten
t of contamination during processing with bacteria able to grow on col
d-stored vacuum-packed sausages. Storage in a cold storage room was id
entified as a critical point with respect to bacterial recontamination
and shelf-life.