Abstract

Controlling food spoilage fungi remains a challenge for food industries, and regulations on the usage of chemical disinfectants are becoming restrictive. Then, this study aimed to evaluate electrolyzed water (EW) as a sustainable alternative for food spoilage fungi inactivation. The experiment was carried out according to the protocol for testing the antifungal effects of chemical sanitizers by the European Committee for Standardization (CEN), using acidic electrolyzed water (AEW-AAC: 85 ppm; pH: 2.65; ORP: 1120 mV) and a basic electrolyzed water (BEW- pH: 11.12; ORP: −209 mV) to inactivate spoilage fungi strains from bread (Hyphopichia burtonii and Penicillium roqueforti) and cheese (P. roqueforti and Penicillium commune), besides the standard fungi for this type of essay (Candida albicans and Aspergillus brasiliensis). AEW presented a higher antifungal effect, inactivating an average of 89 % of the exposed population when compared to its respective BEW, which inactivates about 81.5 %. In general, the standard strains A. brasiliensis (ATCC 16404) and Candida albicans (ATCC 24433) were more sensitive to both AEW and BEW than the food-spoilage strains. Among those, P. roqueforti strains were the most sensitive, followed by P. commune strains, while H. burtonii strains were the most tolerant. EW can be a sustainable alternative for product surface and facility cleaning with further antifungal action when a sanitization step is not mandatory or needed. Future studies searching for conditions to improve the antifungal action of EW could make their industrial usage more viable.

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