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    Microbiota and sensorial attributes of buffalo meat stored under vacuum packaging: combined impact of marination, citrox and oregano essential oil

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    Microbiota and sensorial attributes of buffalo meat stored under vacuum packaging combined impact of marination citrox and oregano essential oil.pdf (1.154Mb)
    Date
    2023-07-26
    Author
    Osaili, Tareq
    Savvaidis, Ioannis N.
    Atoui, Ali
    Tsiraki, Maria I.
    Karam, Layal
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    Abstract
    The demand for marinated meat and natural antimicrobials has increased in the last decade. This study aimed to examine the antimicrobial and sensorial effects of natural citrox (0.2% v/w) and oregano essential oil (0.1% v/w) or their combination on marinated buffalo meat stored under vacuum at two storage conditions of 4°C and 12°C. In the control (without marinade), the population of all the spoilage microorganisms increased by 3.8–6.3 and 4.5–6.3 log cfu/g, at 4 and 12°C, respectively, during storage. On the last day of storage, at both 4 and 12°C, the spoilage microorganisms’ populations were lower for the marinated meat (without citrox and EO) by 1–2 log cfu/g (based on microorganism type) compared to its unmarinated counterpart. The combination of citrox and oregano essential oil (EO) resulted in decreases of 3.0–6.8 and 3.2–6.8 log cfu/g for mesophilic aerobic bacteria, Pseudomonas spp. lactic acid bacteria (LAB), Brochothrix thermosphacta, Enterobacteriaceae, and yeasts, at 4 and 12°C, respectively. The pH values of the treatments with citrox and oregano EO followed a steadily decreasing (P <.05) trend during storage. The recorded sensory data supported that meat marinated with those 2 natural antimicrobials led to a buffalo meat of acceptable quality. Marinade combined with citrox and oregano EO can provide a potential not previously studied solution for buffalo meat preservation.
    URI
    https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85165782351&origin=inward
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10942912.2023.2238919
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/51309
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    • Human Nutrition [‎435‎ items ]

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