Microbiological and physicochemical characterization of the raw milk and the colonial type cheese from the Northwestern Frontier region of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
Keywords:
sanitary conditions, microbiota, quality
Abstract
This study aimed at evaluating the microbiological and physicochemical characteristics of raw milk and colonial type cheese from Northwestern Frontier region of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. For this purpose, the samples were collected in January and July. Microbiological analyses (aerobic mesophilic bacteria, total/thermotolerant coliform, coagulase-positive Staphylococcus, Salmonella spp. and Listeria monocytogenes, lactic acid bacteria) and physicochemical assays (pH, acidity, total solids, protein, fat, aw, moisture, NaCl) were performed. The milk and cheese samples showed low microbiological quality because high counting of aerobic mesophilic bacteria, total/thermotolerant coliform and coagulase-positive Staphylococcus were detected. High counting of lactic acid bacteria was observed. However, neither Salmonella spp. nor Listeria monocytogenes was found. The standard deviations above one (1.0) in the fat, protein, moisture and salt contents indicated that no standard procedure was followed for producing the local cheese. The sample collection period caused differences in the microbiota, total solids of milk and cheese moisture contents, aw and salt. The maturation period did not significantly influenced on the microbial counts, but it provided an increase in protein contents and a decrease in aw value in cheese samples collected in July.
Published
2016-05-05
How to Cite
Funck, G. D., Hermanns, G., Vicenzi, R., Schmidt, J. T., Richards, N. S. P. dos S., Silva, W. P. da, & Fiorentini, Ângela M. (2016). Microbiological and physicochemical characterization of the raw milk and the colonial type cheese from the Northwestern Frontier region of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Revista Do Instituto Adolfo Lutz, 74(3), 247-257. Retrieved from https://periodicoshomolog.saude.sp.gov.br/index.php/RIAL/article/view/33478
Issue
Section
ORIGINAL ARTICLE