Fungi produce a large variety of extracellular proteins, organic acids, and other metabolites and can adapt to several environmental conditions. Mycotoxin-producing moulds of the genera Aspergillus and Penicillium are common food contaminants. One of the natural ways to protect food from mould contamination is to use essential oils. In this study, we evaluated the effect of essential oils of cinnamon, lavender, rosemary, and sage at 1 % (v/v) concentration in yeast media inoculated with spores (fi nal concentration 10 6 mL -1 media) of Aspergillus ochraceus ZMPBF 318 and Penicillium expansum ZMPBF 565, alone or in combination, on fungal biomass. Cinnamon showed the best inhibitory effect (100 %). Lavender oil best inhibited the growth of Aspergillus ochraceus (nearly 100 %), and was less successful with Penicillium expansum (having dropped to 57 % on day 28). With cultivation time the inhibitory effect of sage and rosemary oil grew for Aspergillus ochraceus and dropped for Penicillium expansum. These results suggest that fungi can be controlled with essential oils, especially with cinnamon oil.
Conventional methods for the identification of Listeria in foodstuffs are generally cumbersome and time consuming. The use of primary enrichment in half strength Fraser broth and the use of PALCAM agar were assessed in comparison with API Listeria and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for their ability to accurately detect and confirm the presence of List. monocytogenes in milk products. The aim of our work was to detect List. monocytogenes in domestic unpasteurised milk, fresh cheese and cream of raw milk taken from four different district of Zagreb-Croatia using conventional (microbiological and biochemical - API test) and PCR methods. Of the 180 milk products samples tested, 27.6% were presumptively positive for Listeria on PALCAM agar. Only 21.3% of samples were confirmed to be positive for Listeria by API Listeria test, and 17.3% were confirmed to be positive for List. monocytogenes by PCR amplification of the hly gene (64 bp). PCR was able to eliminate the false positive and detect all List. monocytogenes in the milk products, unlike the conventional methods used in the industry. These results indicate a low presence of this pathogen in this area (Zagreb) of Croatia. PCR proves to be a sensitive and rapid technique to be included in the procedure of detection of List. monocytogenes in food products and this method is considerably faster than current standard methods.
The microbiological quality of a hard mountain unpasteurised sheep cheese from three randomly selected manufacturing locations in Kosovo was investigated. Forty-eight samples of row milk, coagulum, 8-10 days ripening cheese and of ready to eat cheese (45-days in brine) were tested. Seventy-five per cent of raw milk samples failed to comply with EU regulation 853/2004. All of coagulum and ripened cheese failed to comply with EU regulation 2073/2005 on process hygiene criteria. Despite the high incidence of coagulase-positive staphylococci even in the final product [>10 5 colony-forming units (cfu)/g], Staphylococcal enterotoxin was detected in none of the samples and no samples were positive for Listeria monocytogenes and Salmonella enteritidis.
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