Survival of salmonellae during pepperoni manufacture.

TitleSurvival of salmonellae during pepperoni manufacture.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1975
AuthorsSmith JL, Huhtanen CN, Kissinger JC, Palumbo SA
JournalAppl Microbiol
Volume30
Issue5
Pagination759-63
Date Published1975 Nov
ISSN0003-6919
KeywordsAnimals, Cattle, Fermentation, Food Contamination, Food Handling, Food Microbiology, Hot Temperature, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Meat, Salmonella, Salmonella typhimurium, Swine
Abstract

Survival of salmonellae in artificially contaminated beef-pork mixtures (approximately 10(4) salmonellae/g) was studied in pepperoni prepared by either a natural flora or lactic starter culture fermentation or in nonfermented sausages. The pepperoni did not become salmonellae free during the usual commercial 15 to 30-day drying period. Salmonella dublin was present in all products, fermented or unfermented, after 42 to 43 days of drying. At a lower level of contamination, 10(3)/g, S. dublin could not be recovered from starter culture-fermented pepperoni after 14 days of drying but persisted in the natural flora-fermented sausage. S. typhimurium (initial count, 10(4)/g) was absent after 42 days of drying when starter culture was used to ferment the pepperoni, but was still present in the natural flora-fermented and unfermented products. S. dublin, host adapted to cattle, or S. choleraesuis, host adapted to swine, had similar survival patterns in beef pork, or beef-pork pepperoni. Heating salmonellae contaminated beef-pork pepperoni (after fermantation but before drying) to an internal temperature of 60 C (trichinae inactivating) eliminated the food-borne pathogen from the sausage product.

DOI10.1128/am.30.5.759-763.1975
Alternate JournalAppl Microbiol
PubMed ID951
PubMed Central IDPMC187268

Weill Cornell Medicine Neurology 525 E. 68th St.
PO Box 117
New York, NY 10065 Phone: (212) 746-6575