Steam cleaning cuts salmonella in meat, says study

By George Reynolds

- Last updated on GMT

Related tags Escherichia coli

Using commercial household steam cleaning can provide smaller
processing plants with a low cost method of decontaminating beef
and hog carcasses, according to a recent study.

Commercial household steam cleaning can be an effective and economical method of reducing naturally occurring bacteria on freshly slaughtered beef and hog carcasses, according to scientists at the University of Georgia, US. The discovery could offer a relatively simple yet effective way for smaller scale meat processors to meet strict food safety controls. Tests were conducted on 72 beef and 72 hog carcasses from four small or very small processing plants. Three sites on one side of each carcass were exposed to 60 seconds of steam treatment, while the other side remained untreated. Samples were taken before, immediately after and 24 hours following the steam treatment. Prior to treatment, salmonella was found in five of the carcasses, but all tested negative for the pathogen after steam exposure, according to the study. It found that aerobes, coliforms, and enterobacteriaceae at the three anatomical locations on both types of carcasses reduced following steam treatment. Aerobes are bacteria and high levels can indicate possible contamination, while coliforms are a common bacterial indicator of sanitary quality of food and water as they are found in animal feces. Enterobacteriaceae is the family of bacteria that includes salmonella and Escherichia coli (E.coli). Samples taken from the beef carcasses prior to treatment were found to contain mean populations of aerobes, coliforms, and Enterobacteriaceae of 1.88, 1.89, and 1.36 log CFU/cm2, respectively. Immediately after treatment populations fell to 1.00, 0.71, and 0.52 log CFU/cm2, and tests after 24 hours found 1.10, 0.95, and 0.50 log CFU/cm2 remained. Tests on hog carcasses before exposure to steam found mean populations of aerobes, coliforms, and Enterobacteriaceae of 2.50, 2.41, and 1.88 log CFU/cm2, respectively. Immediately after treatment populations fell to 0.50, 0.94, and 0.21 log CFU/cm2, and tests after 24 hours 0.91, 1.56, and 0.44 log CFU/cm2 remained. The bacteria found on pre-treated beef carcasses were generally found to be highest on midline, then neck, followed by rump. The study found for hog carcasses, most bactreria were found on the belly, then jowl, followed by ham.

Related topics Food Safety & Quality

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