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Inactivation of Salmonella, Escherichia coli and Bacillus cereus spores on foods using superheated steam : 과열수증기를 이용한 식품의 Salmonella, Escherichia coli 및 Bacillus cereus 포자의 살균

DC Field Value Language
dc.contributor.advisor최영진-
dc.contributor.author배혜련-
dc.date.accessioned2017-10-31T07:51:29Z-
dc.date.available2020-10-06T09:18:48Z-
dc.date.issued2017-08-
dc.identifier.other000000146347-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/137578-
dc.description학위논문 (석사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 농업생명과학대학 농생명공학부, 2017. 8. 최영진.-
dc.description.abstractThe consumption of spices and nuts has been increased due to the public favoring healthy and fresh foods. Since nuts and spices are prone to deteriorating quality during cooking and sterilization procedure, they are usually consumed as raw material or treated with minimal subsequent sterilization processes. However, these foods are often exposed to foodborne pathogens such as Salmonella during the harvesting, which is a serious hazard for the food safety or due to the low moisture contents during the drying and pulverizing processes promoting the forming of strains of Bacillus spores, some foods are easy to get damages in quality from thermal treatment. Thus, the red peppers were sterilized to prevent the formation of spores from the vegetative Bacillus cells. Based on the previous study that the lab-scale sterilization using superheated steam (SHS) was conducted on black peppercorns, pecans, and almonds, the SHS equipment was improved for the industrial applications as a scale-up study in consideration of increasing the treatment amount of samples and changing the direction of SHS flow in order to reduce heat loss. In this study, the applicability of the modified equipment was verified as a sterilization apparatus on food. Salmonella inoculated on black peppercorns, pecans, and almonds was decontaminated below to detection limit (1 log CFU/g) by 100°C saturated steam, 140 and 180°C superheated steam. And E. coli, and Salmonella inoculated on red pepper were achieved below to detection limit (0.6 log CFU/g) within 10 s by 120, 150, and 180°C SHS, and total aerobic bacteria was reduced within 20, 30, and 50 s by 120, 150, and 180°C SHS, respectively. Due to SHS treatment at a high temperature for a short time, capsaicin content did not change.
Recently, instant foods are more demanded as the number of singles and dual income households increase. Garlic, one of the main ingredients in instant food, is easily contaminated with Bacillus, which allows heat-resistant spores to form and be present in garlics at the level of 2-3 log CFU/g even after washing step. For retort foods containing garlic, sterilization is done at 121.1°C. However, the time for an additional processing is necessary owing to deal with heat-resistant bacteria and Bacillus spores including Bacillus cereus strain in the garlic, causing the quality loss of the foods. For this reason,
B. cereus spores were pretreated with SHS to reduce the total time for subsequent retort processing and minimize the quality deterioration of foods. The study for inactivating the B. cereus spores by SHS was conducted with garlics cloves and sliced garlics, and germinants were used to induce the spore germination in order to increase the efficiency of the SHS sterilization process. As a result, the treatment of SHS at 180°C on garlic cloves inactivated the contamination of the spores by 3 log CFU/g within 90 s. Inactivation of the spores on garlic cloves was more efficient than the sterilization on garlic slices, because garlic slices were dried up faster during the SHS treatment. Effects of the germination inducers were investigated using a germinant buffer with L- alanine, inosine (as famously known as germination inducers), and disodium 5-inosinate (IMP). The Ala+IMP buffer was applied to real food sample with spores inoculated. The sample treated with the germinant buffer was about 0.5 log CFU/g more effective to reduce the spores than the sample without germinant buffer treatment. As a result, a synergistic effect of Ala+IMP was confirmed. The inactivation pattern of B. cereus spores by SHS on garlic was fitted by the Weibull model and tR-value calculated from the Weibull model was tended to decrease as temperature increased. Through pre-treatment sterilization of spores in garlic, total retort processing time could be reduced which minimizes food quality loss.
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dc.description.tableofcontentsPart 1. Applicability verification of superheated steam (SHS) sterilization equipment on foods 1
I. Introduction 2
II. Materials and methods 6
2.1. Superheated steam (SHS) equipment 6
2.1.1. SHS pipelines and temperature monitoring 9
2.1.2. SHS reacting chamber and reacting cell 11
2.2. Bacterial strains and inoculum preparation 13
2.2.1. Bacterial strains 13
2.1.2. Inoculum preparation 13
2.3. Sample preparation and inoculation 14
2.4. SHS treatment 15
2.5. Bacterial enumeration 15
2.6. Quality evaluation of samples 16
2.6.1. Color measurement and moisture content 16
2.6.2. Capsaicin content 17
2.7. Heat resistance parameter 18
2.8. Statistical analysis 19
III. Results and discussion 20
3.1. Operation of the equipment for SHS treatment 20
3.2. Inactivation of the cocktail of Salmonella Typhimurium and Salmonella Enteritidis on black peppercorns, pecan halves, and raw almond kernels 22
3.3. Inactivation of the cocktail of Escherichia coli K-12 and Salmonella Typhimurium, and aerobic bacteria on red peppers 34
3.4. Effect of the SHS treatment on the quality of samples 36
3.4.1. Color and moisture content 36
3.4.2. Capsaicin content 47
IV. Conclusion 49

Part 2. Inactivation of Bacillus cereus spores on garlic using superheated steam 51
I. Introduction 51
II. Materials and methods 54
2.1. Bacterial strain and preparation of the inoculum of Bacillus cereus spores 68
2.1.1. Bacterial strains 54
2.1.2. Production and purification of B. cereus spores and preparation of the inoculum of B. cereus spores 54
2.1.3. Sample preparation and inoculation 55
2.2. SHS treatment 56
2.3. Germinants-induced germination of B. cereus spores 56
2.4. SHS treatment after the germination of B. cereus spores 57
2.5. Bacterial enumeration 58
2.6. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) 59
2.7. Measurement of water activity (Aw) 59
2.8. Statistical analysis 60
III. Results and discussion 61
3.1. Inactivation of B. cereus spores on garlics 61
3.1.1. Inactivation of B. cereus spores on garlic cloves and sliced garlics 61
3.2. Inactivation of B. cereus spores using germinants 68
3.3. Recovery of B. cereus after the SHS treatment 74
3.4. Kinetic study for the SHS inactivation of B. cereus spores on garlics 79

IV. Conclusion 87
V. Reference 89
국문초록 96
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dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent1876056 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subjectsuperheated steam-
dc.subjectsterilization-
dc.subjectblack peppercorns-
dc.subjectpecan halves-
dc.subjectalmond kernels-
dc.subjectred peppers-
dc.subjectgarlics-
dc.subjectSalmonella-
dc.subjectEscherichia coli-
dc.subjectBacillus cereus spore-
dc.subject.ddc630-
dc.titleInactivation of Salmonella, Escherichia coli and Bacillus cereus spores on foods using superheated steam-
dc.title.alternative과열수증기를 이용한 식품의 Salmonella, Escherichia coli 및 Bacillus cereus 포자의 살균-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.contributor.AlternativeAuthorHyeryeon Bae-
dc.description.degreeMaster-
dc.contributor.affiliation농업생명과학대학 농생명공학부-
dc.date.awarded2017-08-
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