4.6 Article

Antimicrobial Performance of Two Different Packaging Materials on the Microbiological Quality of Fresh Salmon

Journal

COATINGS
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/coatings6010006

Keywords

active packaging; carvacrol; coextrusion; lysozyme; lactoferrin; coating; salmon

Funding

  1. EU project FP7-NAFISPACK [212544]

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In the present research the antimicrobial activity of two active packaging materials on the spoilage microbiota of fresh salmon fillets was tested. A PET-coated film (PET: Polyethylene Terephthalate) containing lysozyme and lactoferrin was tested in parallel with a carvacrol-coextruded multilayer film. Salmon fillet samples were stored up to four days at 0 and 5 degrees C, comparatively. The carvacrol multilayer film was found effective in preventing mesophiles and psychrotrophs at shorter storage time and at lower temperature (4.0 compared to 5.0 log CFU/g in the control sample-CFU: Colony Forming Units). Lysozyme/lactoferrin-coated PET was instead efficient in decreasing H2S-producing bacteria at longer storage time and higher temperature (2.7 instead of 4.7 log CFU/g in the control sample). Even if is not intended as a way to clean a contaminated food product, an active package solution can indeed contribute to reducing the microbial population in food items, thus lowering the risk of food-related diseases.

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