Abstract

Two different strains of Lactobacillus bulgaricus (ATCC-11842 and Microlife) and two strains of Streptococcus thermophilus (ATCC-19258 and Microlife) were grown anaerobically on 3% nonfat dry milk in pure and mixed culture using batch followed by fed batch culture. Samples were collected every 30 min. Concentrations of lactose, galactose, lactic acid, and other products present were measured using high pressure liquid chromatography. A spectrophotometric method from the literature was modified and used to determine microbial biomass concentrations. Relative cell numbers of the two organisms were measured microscopically in mixed culture. The results are presented in tabular form. S. thermophilus (Microlife) showed different growth characteristics compared to the other cultures. This culture utilized most of the galactose that was formed and produced greater amounts of lactic acid and biomass.

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