Sous vide cooking is a method of food preparation in which food is vacuum sealed and cooked in a water bath that is set to a precise temperature and circulated by a sous vide device. Due to ease of use and affordability, this cooking method has grown increasingly popular in food service kitchens and domestic settings. However, low-temperature, long holding time sous vide cooking recommendations from manufacturers and chefs in popular press raise food safety concerns-specifically those for the preparation of nonintact beef products. The objective of this experiment was to address these concerns by validating a 5 log reduction of Salmonella spp. In sous vide cooked, nonintact beef steaks. Beef semitendinosus sliced into 2.54 cm steaks were internally inoculated to 7 log with Salmonella Typhimurium, Enteritidis, and Heidelberg via a needle inoculation pin pad. Steaks were individually vacuum sealed, and sous vide cooked at 46.1, 51.6, and 54.4°C. The...
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Journal Article|
February 23 2023
Inactivation of Salmonella in nonintact beef during low-temperature sous vide cooking.
G. A. Sullivan, Department of Animal Science, University of Nebraska- Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68588, USA. E-mail gary.sullivan@unl.edu
Journal: Journal of Food Protection
Citation: Journal of Food Protection (2023) 86 (1)
DOI: 10.1016/j.jfp.2022.11.003
Published: 2023
Citation
Hunt, H. B., Watson, S. C., Chaves, B. D., Sullivan, G. A.; Inactivation of Salmonella in nonintact beef during low-temperature sous vide cooking.. IFIS Food and Health Sciences Database 2023; doi:
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