Effect of psychrotrophic post-pasteurization contamination on the keeping quality at 11 and 5 °C of HTST-pasteurized milk in the UK
- 1 November 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Dairy Research
- Vol. 49 (4), 619-630
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022029900022767
Abstract
Summary: The keeping quality of commercial HTST-pasteurized milk and laboratory pasteurized milk from a common bulk raw supply has been investigated for 5 dairies. Spoilage occurred at levels of total bacterial counts around 107 colony forming units/ml, but with a slightly higher off-flavour threshold for the commercial milks than the laboratory pasteurized milks. The predominant microflora at spoilage and the type of off-flavour produced differed between the 2 types of milk. Raising the storage temperature from 5 to 11 °C caused a slight shift in the spoilage microflora and led to an average reduction in the shelf life of the laboratory pasteurized milk from 28 to 6 d and of the commercial pasteurized milk from 13 to 5 d. Changes in the level of post-pasteurization contamination (PPC) were reflected in changes in keeping quality, particularly at 5 °C. However, the greatest improvements were found in the absence of PPC.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pinpointing Post-Pasteurization ContaminationJournal of Food Protection, 1980
- Storage and transport of pasteurized milkInternational Journal of Dairy Technology, 1979
- Understanding and Teaching the Most Probable Number Technique1Journal of Milk and Food Technology, 1975
- SUBJECT: BITTY CREAM AND RELATED PROBLEMS:PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH BACTERIAL SPORES IN HEAT‐TREATED MILK AND DAIRY PRODUCTSInternational Journal of Dairy Technology, 1975
- CONTAMINATION OF MILK WITH AIRBORNE MICROORGANISMS THROUGH THE VACUUM DEFOAMERJournal of Milk and Food Technology, 1970
- TYPES AND POPULATIONS OF MICROORGANISMS IN THE AIR OF FLUID MILK PLANTSJournal of Milk and Food Technology, 1970
- METHODS OF ASSESSING THE SPORICIDAL EFFICIENCY OF AN ULTRA‐HIGH‐TEMPERATURE MILK STERILIZING PLANT I. EXPERIMENTS WITH SUSPENSIONS OF SPORES IN WATERJournal of Applied Bacteriology, 1957