Title of article :
Microbiology of wheat and flour milling in Australia
Author/Authors :
Berghofer، نويسنده , , Lana K and Hocking، نويسنده , , Ailsa D and Miskelly، نويسنده , , Di and Jansson، نويسنده , , Edward، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages :
13
From page :
137
To page :
149
Abstract :
A survey was undertaken to determine the microbiological status of Australian wheat and the distribution of microorganisms in the flour milling fractions and end products. A total of 650 milling process and end product samples was obtained from nine flour mills located in New South Wales (4), Queensland (2), Victoria (2) and Western Australia (1) during the 1997–1998 and 1998–1999 wheat seasons. Most frequent (modal) counts in wheat and flour were, respectively, as follows: aerobic mesophilic plate count, 105 and 102 colony forming units/gram (cfu/g); coliforms, 10 and 1 most probable number/gram (MPN/g); Bacillus spp., 104 and 102 cfu/g; B. cereus, 1 and 0.1 MPN/g; mesophilic aerobic spores, 10 and 1 cfu/g; aerobic thermophiles, both 10 cfu/g; yeasts, 103 and 102 cfu/g, and moulds, 103 and 102 cfu/g. Bacillus spp., coliforms, yeasts and moulds were the most frequently detected microorganisms throughout the survey. The most common moulds isolated were Aspergillus, Penicillium, Cladosporium and Eurotium spp. Environmental serovars of Salmonella were isolated from two samples. Escherichia coli and B. cereus were present at very low levels, a majority of positive samples being at the minimum level of detection (3 and 0.3 MPN/g, respectively). As wheat grain layers are separated, surface-adhering contaminants are concentrated in end product bran, wheat germ and pollard, which comprise the outer layers of the grain. Consequently, the inner endosperm fraction contains lower microbial counts, and flour is the cleanest end product of the milling process. Higher microbiological counts midstream in the milling process indicate that equipment contamination may contribute to microbiological contamination; however, the microbiological quality of incoming wheat has a strong influence on the ultimate quality of milling end products.
Keywords :
flour , Flour milling , Bran , Escherichia coli , Wheat germ , Bacillus spp. , Bacillus cereus , Coliforms , Yeasts , Moulds , Salmonella , Wheat
Journal title :
International Journal of Food Microbiology
Serial Year :
2003
Journal title :
International Journal of Food Microbiology
Record number :
2110251
Link To Document :
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