Contribution of Leuconostocaceae to CO2-mediated bloater defect in cucumber fermentation.

Food Microbiology
Yawen Zhai, I M Pérez-Díaz

Abstract

Fermented cucumber bloater defect, caused by the accumulation of microbiologically produced carbon dioxide (CO2), creates significant economic losses for the pickling industry. The ability of Leuconostocaceae, indigenous to cucumber, to grow and produce CO2 during a fermentation and cause bloater defect was evaluated. Leuconostocaceae grew and produced over 40% CO2 in cucumber juice medium, used as a model for cucumber fermentation. The inoculation of Leuconostocaceae to 5 Log CFU/g in cucumber fermentations brined with 25 mM calcium chloride and 6 mM potassium sorbate resulted in no significant differences in bloater defect, colony counts from MRS and VRBG agar plates or the fermentation biochemistry; suggesting an inability of the inoculated bacterial species to prevail in the bioconversion. Acidified cucumbers were subjected to a fermentation inoculated with a Leuconostoc lactis starter culture after raising the pH to 5.9 ± 0.4. CO2 was produced in the acidified cucumber fermentations to 13.6 ± 3.5% yielding a bloater index of 21.3 ± 6.4; while 8.6 ± 0.8% CO2 and a bloater index of 5.2 ± 5.9 were observed in the non-inoculated control jars. Together the data collected demonstrate that Leuconostocaceae can produce enough CO2 ...Continue Reading

References

Jul 1, 1990·Applied and Environmental Microbiology·L C McDonaldH M Hassan
Jul 1, 1968·Applied Microbiology·J L EtchellsT A Bell
Feb 26, 2009·Journal of Food Science·I M Pérez-Díaz, R F McFeeters
Jan 25, 2012·Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture·Yi-sheng ChenFujitoshi Yanagida

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