Publication | Open Access
Microbiological quality of some spices and herbs in retail markets
54
Citations
4
References
1982
Year
NutritionMean ValuesFood AnalysisRetail LevelFood ChemistryFood MicrobiologyPublic HealthAntimicrobial ResistanceHealth SciencesMicrobiological QualityFood CompositionMicrobial ControlFoodborne HazardMicrobiomeFood QualityMarketingFood SafetyMicrobial ContaminationFoodborne IllnessEscherichia Coli CountsMicrobiology
The microbiological quality of 10 spices or herbs was determined by a national survey at the retail level. Aerobic plate count values for the 10 products ranged from less than 100 to 3.1 X 10(8) per g; mean values of the individual spices or herbs ranged from 1,400 to 820,000 per g. Coliform counts ranged from less than 3 to 1.1 X 10(6) per g; however, mean values were less than 20 per g for all products. Escherichia coli counts ranged from less than 3 to 2,300 per g. Except for celery seed, which had a mean value of 7 per g, all mean values were less than 3 per g. Yeast and mold counts were made for 5 of the 10 products. Mean values were generally low; the highest mean (290 per g) was obtained for cinnamon.
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