Effect of pimenta essential oil and peracetic acid as pre-grind dip treatments on emerging Salmonella, spoilage bacteria, and quality attributes of ground turkey during chilled storage

Shijinaraj Manjankattil, Grace Dewi, Claire Peichel, Medora Creek, Peter Bina, Tim Johnson, Ryan B Cox, Sally Noll, Anup Kollanoor Johny

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Effective postharvest interventions at the processing stages are recommended to control the transmission of emerging Salmonella serotypes from poultry products to humans. This study investigated the efficacy of pimenta essential oil (PEO) as a pre-grind chill dip antibacterial alone or in combination with peracetic acid (PAA) against emerging serotypes of Salmonella (S. Agona and S. Saintpaul) and spoilage bacteria in ground turkey meat. Turkey breast meat and skin inoculated with 3.5 log10 CFU/g or sq. cm of Salmonella were dipped separately in treatment solutions, including 2 % PEO, 2.5 % PEO, 0.05 % PAA, and their combinations. Positive control samples without antimicrobials were kept for comparison. Bacterial recovery was done after diluting homogenized meat and skin samples. To follow, 2.5 % PEO, 0.05 % PAA, and their combination were tested as pre-grind chill dip antimicrobials against Salmonella survival and spoilage bacteria in turkey meat ground after the dip treatment during refrigerated storage for 7 days. Experiments followed a completely randomized design, and significance was determined at P < 0.05 (6 samples per treatment group). All treatments significantly reduced Salmonella counts on skin and meat samples. Treatments resulted in a complete reduction of Salmonella in chilling water, indicating the potential of preventing cross-contamination of carcasses in the processing line. In the pre-grind chill dip experiment, the treatments reduced Salmonella survival in ground turkey meat with a maximum reduction of 1.6 log10 CFU/g observed in the combination group. Combination treatment reduced spoilage bacteria in ground turkey meat upon refrigerated storage. The pre-grind chill dip using the combination reduced ∼3.1 log10 CFU/g of lactic acid bacteria, 2.5 log10 CFU/g of Pseudomonas, 2.4 log10 CFU/g of total aerobic bacteria, and 2.3 log10 CFU/g of psychrophilic bacteria in ground turkey compared to the positive control. The combination also reduced lipid oxidation and purge loss without affecting pH and color. Results indicate the combination of PEO and PAA would be pre-grind chill dip antimicrobials before turkey meat is ground without affecting meat quality attributes.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number104829
JournalPoultry science
Volume104
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025

Keywords

  • Ground turkey
  • Peracetic acid
  • Pimenta
  • S. Agona
  • S. Saintpaul

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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