Title of article
Effect of temperature on the spoilage rate of whole, unprocessed crabs: Carcinus maenas, Necora puber and Cancer pagurus
Author/Authors
Anthony A. Robson، نويسنده , , Maeve S. Kelly، نويسنده , , John W. Latchford، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
6
From page
419
To page
424
Abstract
Shelf life of whole, initially live, crabs depended primarily on the storage conditions and the time at which death occurred. Large differences in the time that individual crab species survived particular storage conditions resulted in wide variations in shelf-life. Bacterial spoilage of Carcinus maenas, Necora puber and Cancer pagurus, measured using aerobic plate counts, indicated that on ice at 4 °C whole unprocessed crabs had a shelf life ∼9–11 days, at 4 °C ∼13–29 days, in simulated supermarket conditions of sale ∼5–7 days and at 20 °C ∼2–16 days. Storage of whole unprocessed crabs chilled at 4 °C considerably extended shelf life compared to crabs stored on ice. Live crabs stored on ice died within 24 h, most likely due to thermal shock and their early death was responsible for their more rapid increase in bacterial numbers compared to crabs stored at 4 °C. No growth of bacteria occurred in the flesh of live crabs stored at 4 °C for between 128 and 504 h. Crab flesh quality deteriorated prior to maximum shelf-life (defined as the time at which bacterial load reached log 5 cfu/g crabmeat) in some instances. The best compromise between high crabmeat yield and long shelf-life is likely to be to transport crabs at 4 °C live to market where they could be stored live at 4 °C without spoilage for ⩽2 weeks before placed on ice at 4 °C, with a potential maximum shelf life of ∼24 days.
Keywords
bacteria , Necora puber , Shelf-life , Carcinus maenas , Cancer pagurus , Thermal shock , Unprocessed , Spoilage
Journal title
Food Microbiology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Food Microbiology
Record number
1189614
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