Frozen pork patties, thawed overnight at 0 degrees C or temperature abused
through storage at 15 degrees C for 24 h, were packaged using both vacuum a
nd air packaging methods. Immediately after packaging, both sets of patties
were irradiated at 0, 0.5, 1, and 2 kGy. All the samples were stored at 2
degrees C and were analyzed for populations of mesophilic, psychrotrophic,
and lactic acid bacteria every 3 days for 30 days. By using a mesophilic po
pulation of 10(7) cells/g as a criteria for spoilage, fresh pork patties re
ceiving a dose of 0 kGy had shelf lives of 11 and 16 days with air and vacu
um packaging methods, respectively, whereas temperature-abused patties had
a shelf life of 7 days with both air and vacuum packaging methods. Both fre
sh and abused patties that received a dose of 2 kGy had shelf lives that we
re greater than 30 days at 2 degrees C with both air and vacuum packaging m
ethods. Descriptive models based on the Gompertz equation for mesophilic, p
sychrotrophic, and lactic acid bacteria were developed, and the generation
time and lag-phase duration for each bacterial population were calculated.