Abstract

The ability of Listeria monocytogenes to grow at low temperatures and increase to hazardous levels during storage of dairy products is of great concern to the dairy industry. List. monocytogenes was detected in 3·6% of 774 cows' milk samples from 114 farms in Central Spain (Gaya et al. 1998). Ewes' and goats' milks produced in Spain had contamination levels of 2·2 and 2·6% respectively (Rodríguez et al. 1994; Gaya et al. 1996). List. monocytogenes may survive during the manufacture and ripening of most cheese varieties, with higher risk in soft surface-ripened cheeses owing to the rise in pH during ripening (Maisnier-Patin et al. 1992; Giraffa & Carminati, 1997).The efficacy with which actively growing bacteriocin-producing cultures inhibit List. monocytogenes in some cheese varieties has been demonstrated. Nisin-producing starters inhibited List. monocytogenes V7 in Camembert cheese (Maisnier-Patin et al. 1992) and List. innocua BL86/26 in raw ewes' milk Manchego cheese (Rodríguez et al. 1998). A lacticin 3147-producing starter culture (McAuliffe et al. 1999) reduced List. monocytogenes Scott A levels in cottage cheese. Inoculation of milk with enterocin AS-48-producing Enterococcus faecalis INIA 4 inhibited List. monocytogenes strains Ohio and Scott A during the manufacture and ripening of Manchego cheese (Nuñez et al. 1997).Semi-hard cheese varieties from raw or pasteurized cows' milk mixed with different proportions of ewes' and/or goats' milk represent ∼ 50% of Spanish cheese production. The objective of the present work was to evaluate the antilisterial activity of three bacteriocin-producing lactic acid bacteria strains isolated from milk (Rodríguez et al. 2000) during the manufacture and ripening of a semi-hard cheese manufactured from raw milk.

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