4.5 Article

Pulsed UV light as a postprocessing intervention for decontamination of hard-cooked peeled eggs

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 11, Pages 2472-2480

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ijfs.12571

Keywords

Colour; Escherichia coli K12; hard-cooked eggs; photophysical; pulsed light; scanning electron microscopy; texture

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The efficiency of pulsed UV light (PL) for inactivation of E.coli K12 on hard-cooked eggs was investigated. Temperature, colour and texture were recorded to determine adverse effects on quality. Distance from the quartz window (5.5, 9.5cm) and time (1-30s) was set as the experimental variables. Results indicated that E.coli K12 viability decreased at closer distances and increased time (P<0.05). Bacterial populations were reduced to 3.54 log CFU per egg and 3.23 log CFU per egg after 15 and 20s at 5.5cm and 9.5cm, respectively. Scanning electron micrographs revealed the existence of photophysical mechanisms, bacterial overlapping and internalisation interfering inactivation. Treated samples experienced slight thermal increases (6-9 degrees C) contributing to the preservation of colour and texture, not significantly different from untreated samples (P>0.05). Our findings support the use of PL to enhance the safety of hard-cooked eggs although bacterial shadowing may have significant implications on treatment efficiency.

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