Search results for "shelf life"

showing 10 items of 158 documents

Inhibitory effect of sweet whey fermented by Lactobacillus plantarum strains against fungal growth: A potential application as an antifungal agent

2020

Abstract: The presence of mycotoxigenic fungi such as Aspergillus, Penicillium, and Fusarium genera represents a problem in food preservation and consequently, its spoilage. During the fermentation process with lactic acid bacteria, a range of secondary metabolites associated with beneficial health effects were released. In the present study, goat whey fermented by Lactobacillus plantarum (CECT 220, 221, 223, and 748) species has shown a satisfactory inhibitory effect against 28 fungi, showing for certain species of Fusarium genus and also, for Aspergillus steynii, a value of minimum inhibitory concentration until 1.95 g/L. In addition, phenyllactic acid was identified in each sample of fer…

FusariumPreservativeAntifungal Agentsfermentation proceFood spoilageMicrobial Sensitivity TestsShelf lifeFusariumWheymycotoxigenic fungiAnimalsFood sciencephenyllactic acidbiologyChemistryGoatsantifungal activitydigestive oral and skin physiologyPenicilliumFood preservationfood and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationAspergillusWhey ProteinsFermentationPenicilliumFermentationLactobacillus plantarumLactobacillus plantarumFood ScienceJournal of Food Science
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Moisture loss, gain and migration in foods

2011

Abstract: The loss, gain and transfer of moisture often affect food materials. Whether arising from interaction with the atmosphere or with another component of the food, such changes always cause deterioration of the overall quality of the food through softening, toughening, breakdown, swelling or shrinkage due to phase transitions or dissolution. In most cases, water migration leads to organoleptic or microbiological changes in the food. With a view to better understanding the physical deterioration of food and to providing a tool for better control of food quality (and therefore of longer shelf life), this chapter reviews the water relationships in foods with particular attention to, and…

Materials scienceWater activityMoisturedigestive oral and skin physiologyOrganolepticFood scienceAgricultural engineeringShelf lifeFood qualityWater contentSofteningShrinkage
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Detection of Irradiated Food and Evaluation of the Given Dose by Electron Spin Resonance, Thermoluminescence, and Gas Chromatographic/Mass Spectromet…

2018

Abstract The treatment of food with ionizing radiation, at doses lower than 10 kGy, is a preservation technology, which can be used to reduce food spoilage due to microorganisms and to decrease insect infestation, enhancing, in the same time, the hygienic quality, extending the shelf life of food itself. In order to increase the general consumer acceptance and accordingly to facilitate the commercialization and trade of irradiated food, the European Committee for Standardization (CEN) validated reliable analytical techniques to identify irradiated foodstuffs for legal control purposes, distinguished in Chemical, Physical, and Microbiological ones, depending on the characteristics of marker …

Materials scienceChromatographyFood spoilageShelf lifeMass spectrometricThermoluminescenceSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)law.inventionIonizing radiationlawFood irradiationIrradiationCellulose ESR signal Food spoilage GC/MS analysis Ionizing radiation. Irradiation Pathogenic bacteria Tl techniqueElectron paramagnetic resonance
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Oxidative stability of virgin olive oils

2001

An investigation was carried out on virgin olive oils of the Gentile (Larino), Gentile (Colletorto), Coratina, and Leccino varieties, harvested at different times, to assess their oxidation stability. The olive oils were analyzed by means of peroxide, K-232, and K 270 values at 1, 6, 12, and 18 mon of storage in green bottles, in the dark, at temperatures ranging from a mean of 6degreesC in winter to 12degreesC in summer. A subsample was also oven-tested at 75degreesC and then analyzed on a weekly basis using the same oxidative parameters. The less ripe the olives (harvested in the same area, during 1 mon), the more resistant the olive oils were to forced oxidation. The amount of total phen…

AntioxidantChemistryGeneral Chemical Engineeringmedicine.medical_treatmentOrganic ChemistryFood preservationSettore AGR/15 - Scienze E Tecnologie AlimentariShelf lifevirgin olive oil stability oxidationchemistry.chemical_compoundVegetable oilOleuropeinBotanymedicinePhenolsCultivarPeroxide valueFood science
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Antifungal activity of natamycin and development of an edible film based on hydroxyethylcellulose to avoid Penicillium spp. growth on low-moisture mo…

2022

Abstract This study aimed to investigate natamycin's in vitro antifungal activity against Penicillium strains and determine its antifungal effect on Mozzarella cheese slices contaminated with P. commune. Besides, the residual content of natamycin in the samples was assessed during the storage. Natamycin was either sprayed on the cheese surface or incorporated into an edible hydroxyethylcellulose film at concentrations of 0, 0.25, 0.5, and 1 mg/dm2. Natamycin showed an antifungal effect against all Penicillium strains with MIC values ranging from 1.6 to 3.1 μg/mL and MFC values ranging from 12.5 to 200.0 μg/mL. Moreover, both applied techniques significantly (p ≤ 0.05) reduced the population…

Antifungaleducation.field_of_studyMoisturebiologyChemistrymedicine.drug_classPopulationShelf lifebiology.organism_classificationNatamycinMic valuesPenicilliummedicineFood scienceeducationMozzarella cheeseFood Sciencemedicine.drugLWT
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Effects of packaging on shelf-life and quality of minimally processed fennel

2018

Fennel is not a widespread product among minimally processed vegetables, due to the fast deterioration mainly caused by browning of the cut surfaces, even during cold storage. In order to extend the shelf-life of fresh-cut fennel, the influence of different packaging techniques was studied. Sliced fennel, dipped in a citric acid solution (0.5%), was placed in polystyrene trays, sealed with PE film or vacuum packaged in PE bags and stored up to 14 days at 4°C. During this period the weight loss, soluble solid content, pH, color and firmness were evaluated. Minimally processed fennel packed in sealed trays and cold-stored at 4°C, extended its shelf-life to 14 days maintaining acceptable quali…

Browning Cold storage Foeniculum vulgare Fresh-cut Vacuum storagemedia_common.quotation_subjectEnvironmental scienceQuality (business)Settore AGR/04 - Orticoltura E FloricolturaAgricultural engineeringHorticultureShelf lifemedia_commonActa Horticulturae
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A new approach to predict the fish fillet shelf-life in presence of natural preservative agents

2017

Three data sets concerning the behaviour of spoilage flora of fillets treated with natural preservative substances (NPS) were used to construct a new kind of mathematical predictive model. This model, unlike other ones, allows expressing the antibacterial effect of the NPS separately from the prediction of the growth rate. This approach, based on the introduction of a parameter into the predictive primary model, produced a good fitting of observed data and allowed characterising quantitatively the increase of shelf-life of fillets.

Preservativelcsh:TP368-456Predictive microbiologyShelf-lifeFood spoilageFish fillets; Natural preservative agents; Predictive microbiology; Shelf-life; Food ScienceFish filletNatural preservative agents04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesAntibacterial effectShelf life040401 food scienceArticleSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)lcsh:Food processing and manufacture0404 agricultural biotechnologyFish filletsFish filletPredictive microbiologyFood scienceFish fillets Shelf-life Natural preservative agents Predictive microbiology.Natural preservative agentMathematicsFood Science
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Shelf life extension of mozzarella cheese contaminated with Penicillium spp. using the antifungal compound ɛ-polylysine.

2019

Molds are one of the most important spoilage organisms on cheese which can lead to economic loss as well as raising public health concerns due to the production of mycotoxins. This study investigates the use of ɛ-polylysine as natural antimicrobial to inhibit fungal growth. The minimal inhibitory concentrations and minimal fungicidal concentrations of ɛ-polylysine were determined against Penicillium roqueforti, Penicillium nordicum, and Penicillium solitum. Then, polylysine was tested as surface antimicrobial for the preservation of mozzarella slice cheese inoculated with these Penicillium spp. and stored in plastic trays during 25 days. The minimal inhibitory concentrations calculated for…

0106 biological sciencesAntifungal AgentsFood HandlingGeneral Chemical EngineeringFood spoilageMicrobial Sensitivity TestsShelf life01 natural sciencesIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringPenicillium solitumchemistry.chemical_compound0404 agricultural biotechnologyAnti-Infective AgentsCheese010608 biotechnologyFood PreservationPolylysineFood scienceMycotoxinbiologyFungiPenicilliumfood and beveragesPenicillium roqueforti04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesbiology.organism_classificationAntimicrobial040401 food sciencechemistryFood StoragePenicilliumFood MicrobiologyPenicillium nordicumFood ScienceFood science and technology international = Ciencia y tecnologia de los alimentos internacional
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Effect of Vibration on the Quality of Strawberry Fruits Caused by Simulated Transport

2016

Mechanical damage of agricultural products is one of the main problems in the harvest and postharvest chain due to the large economic loss that the shelf life reduction could generate. Measurements of change in the chemical components of highly perishable products and microbial growth under different static and dynamic loads is the first step in the development of intelligent logistic units that could help in predicting the residual shelf life in order to minimize losses along the supply chain. In our research, the effects of vibration along the supply chain of a case study were analyzed on strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa) and woodland strawberry (Fragaria vesca) in terms of microbiological…

Settore ING-IND/17 - Impianti Industriali MeccaniciStrawberry woodland strawberry Shelf life fruit quality VOC Simulated Transport microbiological and quality assessmentSettore AGR/04 - Orticoltura E FloricolturaSettore AGR/16 - Microbiologia Agraria
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Non-conventional osmotic solutes (honey and glycerol) improve mass transfer and extend shelf life of hot-air dried red carrots: Kinetics, quality, bi…

2020

The effect of solutes (sucrose, honey and glycerol) on mass transfer kinetics, physico-chemical and biological quality, and shelf life of red carrot slices (RCSs) obtained by hot-air drying at 60 degrees C/6-8 h was studied. RCSs were osmosed for 24 h in sucrose (S), sucrose + honey (SH), honey (H) and sucrose + glycerol (SGL) before drying. Honey and glycerol enhanced the water loss (WL) and solute gain (SG), giving higher values for Peleg's model constants (k(1), WL = 6.9 and 6.5, for H and SGL, respectively; k(1), SG = 92.8 and 73.5, for H and SGL, respectively). Decreased viscosity of osmotic solutions corresponded with the solute effect on WL and SG, reaching equilibrium after 16 h. Di…

0106 biological sciencesOsmo-convective dryingSucroseChemistryKineticsfood and beveragesStorage04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesMicrostructureShelf life040401 food science01 natural sciencesQualityViscositychemistry.chemical_compoundKinetics0404 agricultural biotechnologyRed carrots (hisar gairic)010608 biotechnologyMass transferFood Science & TechnologyGlycerolFood scienceFood Science
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