A study was carried out on 10 retail samples of yoghurt, belonging to
3 different brands (A, B and C), showing a rarely described alteration
consisting of inward collapse of the packs. Microbiological analyses
revealed the presence of high counts of different microbial contaminan
ts: in A samples Acetobacter aceti was found at 10(7) cfu/g, while in
B and C samples the main contaminants were Mucor hiemalis Mucor racemo
sus and Penicillium verrucosum var cyclopium varying between 10(2) and
10(5) cfu/g. The responsibility of isolated strains for alteration wa
s confirmed by inoculating cellular suspensions in non-contaminated yo
ghurt packs kept at 5-degrees-C and 25-degrees-C: samples inoculated w
ith A aceti showed an inward collapse after 20 d at 25-degrees-C; pack
s inoculated with M hiemalis, M racemosus and P verrucosum var cyclopi
um kept at 25-degrees-C showed swelling after 5-7 d followed by inward
collapse after almost-equal-to 20-35 d. In samples kept at 5-degrees-
C the defect did not appear even extending the incubation time to 60 d
. The explanation for the evolution of this defect is the following on
e: contaminating microorganisms consume oxygen contained in head-space
of pack and produce CO2 whose re-absorption into the product causes a
partial vacuum involving collapse of the pack.