Abstract

A cross-sectional survey was undertaken in Belgian beef producing companies to study the current practices and the microbiological load of dry-aged loins (during production) and trimmed steaks (final product). In each company, the temperature and relative humidity of the ripening chamber were measured, and two loins (each in a different stage of the ripening process) were sampled. From the surface of each loin, a lean meat and adipose tissue sample was analysed separately, and different groups of bacteria, yeasts and moulds were enumerated. The average relative humidity in the ripening chambers was 72 ± 13% and the temperature ranged between 0.0 °C and 5.9 °C. During the drying process, most of the lean meat and adipose tissue samples showed high numbers of total psychrotrophic aerobic bacteria, Pseudomonas spp., psychrotrophic lactic acid bacteria, and yeasts, but the variation between loins was high. The microbiological load on freshly cut dry-aged steaks was generally lower than on loin surfaces, but both psychrotrophic aerobic and anaerobic bacteria were present inside several steaks. The water activity inside dry-aged beef steaks was high (aw ≥ 0.98), which could allow growth of psychrotrophic pathogens, though more in-depth studies are necessary to determine potential growth during the storage of (trimmed) steaks or even inside loins during the dry-aging process.

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