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Brazilian artisanal Colonial cheese: characterization, microbiological safety, and survival of Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis during ripening.

Roberto DegenhardtMichelle M CarvalhoMorgana Ferreira VoidaleskiGisele Felicetti DarosAndréia GuaragniGilberto Vinícius de Melo PereiraJuliano De Dea Lindner
Published in: Brazilian journal of microbiology : [publication of the Brazilian Society for Microbiology] (2023)
The artisanal Colonial cheese is typical of the southern region of Brazil and dates back to the colonization by Italian and German immigrants. Produced with raw milk, it is the main cheese produced by more than 15,200 small rural proprieties. The consumer increasingly appraises food with territorial valorization, demanding specific sanitary norms for this type of cheese. This work aimed to know the physical-chemical characteristics of the cheeses produced in the west of Santa Catarina State, to study the ripening time to reach microbiological safety, and to experimentally observe the survival of Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis ATCC 13076 during the ripening. The physical-chemical characterization was performed with 129 samples of cheeses. Five dairies were selected for evaluation of the ripening process. Salmonella survival using a challenge test was performed on three batches prepared in a pilot plant. The cheeses were classified as high (15.4%), medium (74.6%), and low moisture (9.2%), and concerning fat content as semi-fat (37.5%) and fat (62.5%). Salmonella challenge test demonstrated their survival for up to 28 days, depending on the initial contamination. The ripening monitoring showed that thermotolerant coliforms could be a good indicator of the process because they are the most persistent microorganisms.
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