食品腐败微生物学的本科生实验练习

A. Snyder, R. Worobo, A. Orta-Ramirez
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引用次数: 1

摘要

食品腐败具有巨大的经济影响,微生物食品腐败在食品浪费和损失中起着重要作用;因此,在本科食品微生物学教学中,应该有同等重要的部分专门用于腐败微生物学。在这里,我们描述了一套本科生微生物实验室练习,特别关注食物腐败,这是康奈尔大学本科生食品微生物实验室课程的一部分,分为两个实验阶段。这个实验分为三个练习。两个练习引导学生通过(练习1a)电镀和观察菌落形态以及(练习1b)测定这些分离物的热阻来确定罐装萨尔萨酱中可能的污染源。最后的练习(2)涉及到苹果汁中腐坏细菌Alicyclobacillus的检测。在这个练习中,我们还准备了变质果汁的演示,让学生观察由于变质而引起的感官变化,强调变质并不总是可以通过视觉检测到的。学生们根据实验室的研究结果,成功地确定了污染源,并据此提出了生产建议,以减少罐装莎莎酱产品中的微生物食物变质。根据学生对实验室练习后提供的讨论问题的回答,参与者能够(a)确定微生物腐败的重要性以及腐败与食品安全的主要区别,(b)描述与微生物腐败相关的各种感官变化,以及(c)采用方法和分析来评估污染的来源和类型。可下载的讲义和逐步指导可作为支持信息。
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Undergraduate Laboratory Exercises Specific to Food Spoilage Microbiology
Food spoilage has an enormous economic impact, and microbial food spoilage plays a significant role in food waste and loss; subsequently, an equally significant portion of undergraduate food microbiology instruction should be dedicated to spoilage microbiology. Here, we describe a set of undergraduate microbiology laboratory exercises that focus specifically on food spoilage which were taught in 2 lab periods as part of the undergraduate food microbiology lab curriculum at Cornell University. The lab was broken down into 3 exercises. Two exercises lead students to determine the likely source of contamination in a canned salsa through (exercise 1a) plating and observation of colony morphology and (exercise 1b) determination of the thermal resistance for those isolates. The final exercise (2) involved detection of the spoilage bacterium Alicyclobacillus in apple juice. Spoiled juice demonstrations were also prepared in this exercise for students to observe sensorial changes resulting from spoilage, emphasizing that spoilage is not always visually detectable. Students were able to successfully determine the source of contamination based on the results of their laboratory findings, which they used to make recommendations for production to reduce microbial food spoilage in the canned salsa product. Based on student answers to discussion questions provided following lab exercises, participants were able to (a) identify the significance of microbial spoilage and how spoilage is principally different from food safety, (b) describe varying sensorial changes associated with microbial spoilage, and (c) employ methods and analysis to evaluate sources and type of contamination. Downloadable handouts and stepwise instructions are available as supporting information.
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