Title: Slit Defect in Cheddar Cheese
1Slit Defect in Cheddar Cheese
- Catherine Donnelly, P.I., UVM
- Cecilia Golnazarian, UVM
- Kathryn Boor, co-P.I., Cornell
- 13th Annual Cornell Conference on Dairy Markets
and Product Research
2Slit defect
- A structural defect in long-hold Cheddar cheese.
- No specific sensory defects have been observed in
defective cheeses. - Defect can increase cutting losses from 10
(non-defective) up to 50. - This problem costs the cheese industry a lot of
money.
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5Project hypotheses
- Gas-producing non-starter lactic acid bacteria
are responsible for the slit defect in long-hold
Cheddar cheese. - Identification of strains responsible for slit
defect will allow development of specific control
strategies to reduce the incidence of the defect.
6Where could gas come from?
- CO2 evolution from fermentation of residual
lactose by heterofermentative lactobacilli - CO2 from fermentation of residual citrate
7Residual lactose
- Initial lactose level 1, decreasing slowly over
a few weeks with a parallel rise in L-lactate
(lactic acid) - Non Starter Lactics (NSLAB) reach high levels by
50 days (107-108cfu/g)total - Pediococci
- Lactobacilli
- Lactobacillus casei Lactobacillus plantarum
- Lactate remains 1.5, but NSLAB transform
L-lactate to D-lactate
8Non-starter lactic acid bacteria
- Some strains can
- Oxidize lactate to acetate CO2 H20
- Oxidize citrate to acetate CO2 H20
-
9Citrate fermenting organisms
- Lactobacillus plantarum
- Lactobacillus casei
- Streptococcus lactis ssp. diacetylactis
10Project Objectives
- Isolate and characterize heterofermentative
lactic acid bacteria associated with the slit
cheese defect - Use phenotypic and genetic methods to classify
isolates into coherent subsets
11Experimental approach
- Isolation of lactic acid bacteria from Cheddar
cheese and from plant environments using
Petrifilm Aerobic Count Plate for Lactic Acid
Bacteria - Characterization of isolates by API 50 CH, Biolog
and automated ribotyping (RiboPrinterTM,
Qualicon) - Test lactic acid bacteria representative for
Cheddar cheese exhibiting the slit defect in
cheese making experiments
12Results
- Obtained 83 and 27 lactic acid bacterial isolates
from Cheddar cheese with and without the slit
defect, respectively - Characterization of isolates from slit cheese by
API 50CH
Species Slit cheese Normal Cheese Lb.
curvatus 27 5 Lb. paracasei subsp.
paracasei 1 3 0 Lb. paracasei subsp.
paracasei 3 21 19 Unidentified 32 3
13Biolog Characterization
- Bacterial identification system that uses
oxidation patterns of 95 different substrates for
the identification of bacterial species - In preliminary experiments, the standard protocol
as suggested by Biolog gave unsatisfactory
results - We developed a modified Biolog protocol using
anaerobic incubation which will provide better
phenotypic characterization and differentiation
of lactic acid bacteria - Biolog data allowed clustering of isolates into
subsets
14Ribotype Characterization
- 11 different ribotypes among 23 isolates
- Ribotyping shows a discriminatory index
(Simpsons Index) of 0.848, i.e. this method can
differentiate two unrelated strains 84.8 of the
time
15Summary
- The API 50CH system identifies heterofermentative lactic acid bacteria isolates
from Cheddar cheese to the species level - The standard Biolog protocol does not allow good
differentiation of heterofermentative lactic acid
bacteria isolated from Cheddar cheese - Automated ribotyping shows good discriminatory
ability of lactic acid bacteria isolated from
Cheddar cheese
16Summary (continued)
- Lb. curvatus and heterofermentative lactic acid
bacteria which could not be identified by API
50CH appear to be more common in Cheddar cheese
exhibiting the slit defect as compared to normal
cheeses
17Project Objectives
- Determine whether specific lactic acid bacteria
strains are responsible for slit defect through
cheese making experiments. - Chemically analyze cheeses, including gas
production. - Monitor development of the slit defect using
Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
18Strains used in cheese making trials
- L. curvatus
- L. paracasei ssp. paracasei 1
- L. paracasei ssp. paracasei 3 (4 strains)
- Cocktail of all 6 strains
- uninoculated control
19Time until slit development
- L. paracasei ssp. paracasei 3
- API-4 6mo
- 626-19 6mo
- 1033 4 mo
- 815 no slits
20Time until slit development
- L. paracasei 1 API-11 4 mo.
- L. curvatus 626-17 4 mo
- cocktail no slits
- control no slits
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24- Cheese making experiments using Lb. curvatus
(n3), Lb. paracasei subsp. paracasei 1(n2) and
Lb. paracasei subsp paracasei 3 (n6) showed that
some strains of each species appear to be able to
cause the slit defect, although two isolates did
not cause slit defect
25Project Objective
- Characterize strains for salt and thermotolerance
and ability to form biofilms.
26Strains Chosen for Pasteurization Salt Tolerance
- Two L. para. ssp. para. 1
- 74-S-4 (2)
- Five L. para. ssp. para. 3
- 74-S-1 (2) 74-S-2 (1) 74-S-3 (2)
- Three L. curvatus
- 74-S-2 (1) 74-S-7 (2)
27HTST Pasteurization
- Cultured strains in MRSB (30oC/24h)
- Inoculated 2 sterile milk
- 105 cfu/ml
- Sealed and submerged in water bath
- 71.7oC 16 sec.
- Incubated 2 hr. at 31.1oC
- Plated serial dilutions on MRSA
28Pasteurization Results
- 2 isolates survived pasteurization
- L. paracasei ssp. paracasei 3
- 74-S-1
- 74-S-2
29Thermotolerance
- 105cfu/ml suspended in milk
- Sealed and submerged in water bath
- 62.8oC
- Removed at intervals
- 0, 10, 20, and 30 minutes
- Incubated 2 hr at 31.1oC
- Plated serial dilutions on MRSA
30Thermotolerance Results (62.8C)
4 11 12 13 15 17 18 19 103 815
strain
0 10 20 30 minutes
31Conclusions - Pasteurization
- Two strains survived HTST pasteurization
(71.7oC) - Four strains survived pasteurization at 62.8oC
32Salt Tolerance in MRS
- Isolates cultured in MRSB 18 hrs 30oC
- 20 ul aliquots delivered to MRSB NaCl
- 0, 1, 2, and 5
- Incubated 24hrs 30oC
- Plated on MRSA
- Incubated 48 hrs
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35Salt Tolerance in Milk
- Isolates cultured in MRSB 18 hrs 30oC
- 20ul aliquots to 2 milk w/NaCl
- 0, 1, 2, and 5
- Incubated 24 hrs 30oC
- Plated on MRSA
- Incubated 48 hrs
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38Conclusions - Salt Tolerance
- Numbers increased up to 2 added NaCl, then
decreased at 5 added NaCl for - L. curvatus (3)
- L. paracasei ssp. paracasei 3 (3)
- Numbers decreased with added NaCl for
- L. paracasei ssp. paracasei 3 (2)
- L. paracasei ssp. paracasei 1 (2)
39Cleaner And Sanitizer Efficacy Against Biofilm
- Develop biofilm of Lactobacilli
- an attachment of the bacteria to a surface
- development of glycocalyx
- Compare abilities of cleaners and sanitizers to
remove biofilm
40Biofilm Formation
- Stainless steel coupons type 304/2b added to 2
UHT milk 104 cfu/ml culture - Shaking water bath 31oC 10 days
- milk refreshed at day 5
- Confirm presence of biofilm with SEM
41SEM - 8 day biofilm 7,500x
42SEM - 8 day biofilm 7,500x
43Cleaning/Sanitizing Protocol
- Designed to simulate cleaning of processing
pieces by hand - Rinse vigorously with PBS (3x)
- Swab with cleaner Rinse (3x)
- Alkaline detergent
- Place into sanitizer Rinse (3x)
- Quaternary Ammonium
44Survival (Presence/Absence)
- Controls
- 1.Uninoculated milk, not cleaned/sanitized
- 2. Inoculated, not cleaned/sanitized
- Rinse in PBS (3x)
- Swab with PBS Rinse (3x)
- 3. Uninoculated milk, cleaned/sanitized
45Biofilm Results
- Control - uninoculated milk coupon
- Rinsed and swabbed only
- positive
- Control - uninoculated milk coupon
- Cleaned and sanitized
- negative
46Biofilm Results
- Control - Inoculated
- Untreated
- positive
- Cleaned and Sanitized - Inoculated
- positive
47Conclusions
- Heterofermentative lactic acid bacteria can play
a role in the genesis of the slit defect - Species identification of lactic acid bacteria
isolated from Cheddar cheese using phenotypic
methods is often unsatisfactory - Automated ribotyping shows promise as a highly
discriminatory tool for tracking the spread and
origin of non-starter lactic acid bacteria
48Conclusions
- Heterofermentative lactobacilli isolated from
defective Cheddar cheeses have the capacity to
form biofilms that are resistant to hand cleaning
and sanitizing procedures. - These biofilms are likely to contaminate cheeses
during manufacturing processes. - Plant sanitation practices are therefore likely
to play an important role in the occurrence of
this defect.