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Combined pH and high hydrostatic pressure effects on Lactococcus starter cultures and Candida spoilage yeasts in a fermented milk test system during cold storage

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 08:25 authored by Hossein Daryaei, John Coventry, Cornelis Versteeg, Farrokh Sherkat
The combined effects of high pressure processing (HPP) and pH on the glycolytic and proteolytic activities of Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis, a commonly used cheese starter culture and the outgrowth of spoilage yeasts of Candida species were investigated in a fermented milk test system. To prepare the test system, L. lactis subsp. lactis C10 was grown in UHT skim milk to a final pH of 4.30 and then additional samples for treatment were prepared by dilution of fermented milk with UHT skim milk to pH levels of 5.20 and 6.50. These milk samples (pH 4.30, 5.20 and 6.50) with or without an added mixture of two yeast cultures, Candida zeylanoides and Candida lipolytica (10(5) CFU mL(-1) of each species), were treated at 300 and 600 MPa (=20°C, 5 min) and stored at 4°C for up to 8 weeks. Continuing acidification by starter cultures, as monitored during storage, was substantially reduced in the milk pressurised at pH 5.20 where the initial titratable acidity (TA) of 0.40% increased by only 0.05% (600 MPa) and 0.10% (300 MPa) at week 8, compared to an increase of 0.30% in untreated controls. No substantial differences were observed in pH or TA between pressure-treated and untreated milk samples at pH 4.30 or 6.50. The rate of proteolysis in milk samples at pH values of 5.20 and 6.50 during storage was significantly reduced by treatment at 600 MPa. Treatment at 600 MPa also reduced the viable counts of both Candida yeast species to below the detection limit (1 CFU mL(-1)) at all pH levels for the entire storage period. However, samples treated at 300 MPa showed recovery of C. lipolytica from week 3 onwards, reaching 10(6)-10(7) CFU mL(-1) by week 8. In contrast, C. zeylanoides did not show any recovery in any of the pressure-treated samples during storage.

History

Journal

Food Microbiology

Volume

27

Issue

8

Start page

1051

End page

1056

Total pages

6

Publisher

Academic Press Ltd- Elsevier Science Ltd

Place published

London, United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

Former Identifier

2006022199

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2011-11-04