2000
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2621.2000.tb16076.x
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Thermal Inactivation Kinetics of Salmonella and Listeria in Ground Chicken Breast Meat and Liquid Medium

Abstract: Thermal inactivation of Listeria innocua and 6 Salmonella serotypes in ground chicken breast meat was compared to that in peptone (0.1%) ‐ agar (0.1%) solution. Inoculated samples were packed in a thin‐wall metal tube and submerged in a water bath at temperatures ranging from 55.0 to 70.0 °C. For Salmonella and Listeria, the D values in ground chicken breast meat at 55 to 70 °C were higher (p < 0.0001) than those in peptone‐agar solution; however, the z values were not significantly different. Complete first‐o… Show more

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Cited by 103 publications
(46 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
(14 reference statements)
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“…Combination of thermal treatment and antimicrobial treatments are, therefore, needed that are practical, cost-effective and safe to use while maintaining the organoleptic attributes of poultry meat. However, many studies have been carried out on thermal inactivation of Salmonella with or without antimicrobial on ground chicken meat, poultry meat and poultry products (Murphy et al 2000(Murphy et al , 2004Mazzotta 2000;Juneja et al 2001;Osaili et al 2006;Juneja 2007;Bucher 2008), but there is no study available on the thermal inactivation of Salmonella on dressed chicken skin surface using antimicrobials. Because many countries consume dressed poultry meat, so it is necessary to assess the effect of thermal inactivation of Salmonella on dressed chicken skin.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Combination of thermal treatment and antimicrobial treatments are, therefore, needed that are practical, cost-effective and safe to use while maintaining the organoleptic attributes of poultry meat. However, many studies have been carried out on thermal inactivation of Salmonella with or without antimicrobial on ground chicken meat, poultry meat and poultry products (Murphy et al 2000(Murphy et al , 2004Mazzotta 2000;Juneja et al 2001;Osaili et al 2006;Juneja 2007;Bucher 2008), but there is no study available on the thermal inactivation of Salmonella on dressed chicken skin surface using antimicrobials. Because many countries consume dressed poultry meat, so it is necessary to assess the effect of thermal inactivation of Salmonella on dressed chicken skin.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The value of k is the temperature dependence of the rate constant, which is assumed to follow the Arrhenius eq. (15). T c is the temperature at which inactivation accelerates.…”
Section: Post-packaging Pasteurization Validation Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, k 0 is not atypical for such processes and is similar to what has been reported in the technical literature for characterizing the thermal inactivation of some food pathogens. For example, a study of the thermal inactivation kinetics of Listeria resulted in values of E A and k 0 of 352.2 kJ/mol and 5.06 × 10 54 min −1 , respectively (Murphy et al, 2000).…”
Section: Isothermal Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%