Residential Refrigerator Performance Based on Microbial Indicators of Ground Beef Preservation Assessed Using Predictive Microbiology Tools

The aim of this study was to develop a refrigerator performance assessment procedure based on the temperature (2 × 10 6 values) of ground beef stored in its bottom drawer set to Fresh Meat (0 °C). Effects analyzed were ambient temperature (LT, 21.1 °C/HT, 32.2 °C), food load (LL, 22.5 kg/HL, 39.0 kg...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food and bioprocess technology 2020-12, Vol.13 (12), p.2172-2185
Hauptverfasser: de la Cruz Quiroz, Reynaldo, Rodriguez-Martinez, Veronica, Velazquez, Gonzalo, Perez, Gabriel M., Fagotti, Fabian, Welti-Chanes, Jorge, Torres, J. Antonio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The aim of this study was to develop a refrigerator performance assessment procedure based on the temperature (2 × 10 6 values) of ground beef stored in its bottom drawer set to Fresh Meat (0 °C). Effects analyzed were ambient temperature (LT, 21.1 °C/HT, 32.2 °C), food load (LL, 22.5 kg/HL, 39.0 kg), door openings, and refrigerator compressor mode (SS, single speed/VS, variable speed). Published predictive microbiology models for exponential growth and ground beef temperature (48-h tests) were used to define absolute (API) and relative preservation indicators (RPI). For VS mode, API (log CFU/g) ranged from 1.7 (LT/LL) to 3.1 (HT/HL) for Listeria monocytogenes and 1.6 to 2.5 for Pseudomonas putida . Ground beef temperature reductions with minimum freezing risk yielded significantly lower API values indicating the need for refrigerator settings below 5 °C. Probabilistic analysis considering the model and temperature measurement variability confirmed this need. At 2 °C as recommended for ground beef storage, API 2°C would be 1.1 ( L. monocytogenes ) and 1.4 logCFU/g ( P. putida ). RPI defined as the ratio of experimental API over API 2°C yielded values > 1 confirming that a refrigerator control logic must consider preservation in addition to energy use compliance. In this study, SS outperformed energy-efficient VS compressors; however, compressor optimization considering energy use and food preservation would favor the latter. In conclusion, API and RPI values were effective tools to assess the microbial food preservation performance of a refrigerator and its use could be extended to analyze any segment of the refrigerated food distribution chain. Transforming time-temperature data into microbial performance indicators is practical and cost-effective.
ISSN:1935-5130
1935-5149
DOI:10.1007/s11947-020-02551-5