SUMMARYMatured Wiltshire bacon normally carries 105–106 viable bacteria/g when sliced, predominantly salt tolerant micrococci and lactobacilli.Kept at 15°, the numbers rose in 4 days to 107–108/g, the flora remaining generally similar in nature and with higher counts at 20° than at 37°. The situation then stabilized; there was a slow decline in organoleptic quality, but nothing unusual occurred in two weeks. Kept at 37°, similar numbers were reached after 1 day, and the nature of the flora changed rapidly, counts at 37° much exceeding those at 20°. Organoleptic deterioration was marked after 2 days and the bacon was unacceptable after 4 days. These changes occurred whether the bacon was packed in air or in 5% oxygen, the oxygen being all consumed in 4 days or less according to temperature. Apparently, if the bacon is kept at too high a temperature for its normal psychrophilic (20° optimum) flora, this is replaced by a mesophilic (37° optimum) flora. It appears that pathogenic staphylococci might be present in this mesophilic flora. A high proportion of isolates proved to be phosphatase positive, or 44° positive; and some had both these properties. Though all, so far, have been coagulase negative, there is no evident reason why pathogenic types should not occur.
Read full abstract