Abstract

Samples of orange juice inoculated with strain CECT 7094 of Alicyclobacillus acidoterrestris or strain CECT 5324 of Alicyclobacillus hesperidum were pre-heated to five different temperatures (20, 50, 60, 70 and 80 °C) before applying a 300 MPa Ultra High Pressure Homogenization (UHPH) treatment. Treated and control samples were kept during 30 days at 22 °C, 30 °C and 43 °C to evaluate the ability of the surviving spores to germinate and grow. UHPH treatments hardly affected the spore counts at the lowest inlet temperature (20 °C), but significant reductions were observed when inlet temperature raised to 60 °C, achieving lethality values above 5 Log CFU/ml when juice samples were pre-heated at 70 for A. hesperidum and 80 °C for A. acidoterrestris. During the later storage of the juice samples Alicyclobacillus counts increased significantly during the first 15 days in samples pre-heated at 20 °C and 50 °C when they were stored at both 30 °C and 43 °C, achieving similar counts than control samples, but not at 22 °C. Nevertheless, in samples pre-heated at 70 and 80 °C spore counts remained below the detection limit indicating that these treatments were the most efficient inactivating Alicyclobacillus spp. spores.

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