Reports on a study of the bacteriological and mycological quality of 87 prepared salads purchased from delicatessens. Bacterial counts were generally low. Of the 87 salads, only 19 per cent had plate counts greater than 104 organisms/g. Coliforms were isolated from three samples, E. coli from one and Listeria monocytogenes from one. By contrast yeasts were isolated from 76 per cent of the salads and at counts greater than 104 organisms/g in 31 per cent. Twenty‐one different yeast species were isolated, of which the commonest were Saccharomyces dairensis and Saccharomyces exiguus. Few of the yeasts have any significant role in human disease. The commonest yeasts isolated,however, are associated with spoilage of mayonnaise‐based salads. Their isolation from these foods suggests inadequate temperature control.
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1 April 1994
Case Report|
April 01 1994
Isolation of Food Spoilage Yeasts from Salads Purchased from Delicatessens Available to Purchase
Paul R. Hunter;
Paul R. Hunter
Consultant Medical Microbiologist and Director of the Chester Public Health Laboratory.
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Helen Hornby;
Helen Hornby
Senior Medical Laboratory Scientific Officer at Chester Public Health Laboratory.
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Colin K. Campbell;
Colin K. Campbell
Microbiologist now based at the PHLS Mycology Reference Laboratory, Bristol.
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Katherine F. Browne
Katherine F. Browne
Medical Laboratory Scientific Officer at the Central Public Health Laboratories, London.
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-4108
Print ISSN: 0007-070X
© MCB UP Limited
1994
British Food Journal (1994) 96 (3): 23–25.
Citation
Hunter PR, Hornby H, Campbell CK, Browne KF (1994), "Isolation of Food Spoilage Yeasts from Salads Purchased from Delicatessens". British Food Journal, Vol. 96 No. 3 pp. 23–25, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/00070709410060781
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