Litcius/Paper detail

Competition between Starter Cultures and Wild Microbial Population in Sausage Fermentation: A Case Study Regarding a Typical Italian Salami (Ventricina)

Chiara Montanari, Federica Barbieri, Fausto Gardini, Giulia Tabanelli

2021Foods23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, an Italian long-ripened traditional fermented sausages, produced using starter cultures. After ripening, some relevant organoleptic defects (off-odour, crust formation) were observed. Therefore, analyses were carried out in the inner and outer sausage section to explain this phenomenon. Microbiological analyses indicated a high meat batter contamination and metagenomic analyses evidenced the inability of LAB starter cultures to lead the fermentation process. The results of this not controlled fermentation were the accumulation of high levels of biogenic amines (including histamine) and the formation of a volatile profile different if compared with similar products. Indeed, the volatilome analysis revealed unusually high amounts of molecules such as isovaleric acid, propanoic acid, 1-propanol, which can be responsible for off-odours. This study demonstrated that starter culture use needs to be modulated in relation to production parameters to avoid safety and organoleptic concerns.

Topics & Concepts

StarterOrganolepticFood scienceFermentationPopulationRipeningFermentation starterChemistryBiologyBacteriaLactic acidDemographySociologyGeneticsPolyamine Metabolism and ApplicationsMeat and Animal Product QualityProtein Hydrolysis and Bioactive Peptides