Abstract

The effect of the application of different disinfectants on the microbial load and sensory quality of fresh-cut lettuce was evaluated during washing, and after subsequent storage at 4 °C under modified atmosphere packaging (MAP). Different families of potential alternative sanitizers were tested: quaternary ammonium compounds (QACs) as benzalkonium chloride (BZK), and didecyldimethylammonium chloride (DDAC); isothiazolinones (mixture of chloromethylisothiazolinone and methylisothiazolinone, CMIT:MIT 3:1); and, essential oils (carvacrol, CAR). All these disinfectants were effective to inactivate Salmonella (103 CFU/mL) present in wash water. In addition, all tested chemicals could reduce Salmonella on produce to levels >95%, with chlorine and BZK-CAR reaching maximum reductions of 99.0%. These disinfectants also enhanced a reduction in natural microbiota present on the produce. The highest reduction corresponded to free chlorine (50 mg/L) (95.1%), CMIT:MIT (50 mg/L) (Kathon®) (94.5%), and BZK (300 mg/L) (91.3%). However, only free chlorine (50 mg/L), CMIT:MIT (50 mg/L) (Kathon®), and DDAC (100 mg/L) resulted in minimal negative impact on end-product quality during 14-day storage. On the contrary, an adequate sensory quality could be only maintained up to 7 days for produce treated with BZK (300 mg/L).
Loading...

Quotes

0 citations in WOS
0 citations in

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ELSEVIER

Description

Citation

LWT 162 (2022) 113441

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Statistics

Views
63
Downloads
78

Bibliographic managers

Document viewer

Select a file to preview:
Reload