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Friday, February 10, 2012

Abstracts from   Fleischwirtschft International   Fleischwirtschft

Fleischwirtschaft 90 (2), S. 95-99, 2010

Isolation of potential starter strains from spontaneously fermented Swiss raw sausages

By Dino Isolini, Cora Weishaupt, Charlotte Egger, René Badertscher und Ruedi Hadorn

Raw sausage | starter culture| Lactobacillus | Staphylococcus | isolation | nitrate | nitrite | acidification | microbial growth


(original article is only in German language available)
 
23 spontaneously fermented raw sausages of different types and from different Swiss regions were used for the isolation of 122 isolates of lactic acid bacteria and 19 strains of staphylococci, which corresponded well with the species used in commercial meat starter cultures. A large variation was found in the tested technological characteristics like growth and acidification, effect of nitrate and nitrite on growth, nitrite degradation (all for lactic acid bacteria) and nitrate reductase activity (for staphylococci) for the isolates from the spontaneously fermented raw sausages. They also covered isolates which were comparable with those from the commercial starter cultures. Some L. curvatus and L. sakei strains degraded much more nitrite than the other lactic acid bacteria strains, whereas four staphylococci strains (including a commercial one) showed no nitrate-reductase activity. It was concluded from the present study that the used technological characteristics are suitable for strain selection for the development of future meat starter cultures. However, additional properties like aroma, bacteriocin production, antibiotic resistance, reduction of biogenic amines and aptitude for lyophilisation have to be considered before the definitive introduction of such meat starter cultures.

Authors' addresses

Lic. phil nat., Dipl.-Biologe Dino Isolini, medizinische Laborantin Cora Weishaupt, Dr.
Charlotte Egger, Dipl.-Chemiker HTL René Badertscher, Dr. Ruedi Hadorn1, Forschungsanstalt Agroscope Liebefeld-Posieux ALP, Schwarzenburgstraße 161, 3003 Bern, Schweiz;
1 seit 1. Januar 2010: Schweizer Fleisch-Fachverband (SFF), Steinwiesstraße 59, 8032 Zürich, Schweiz
 

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