Abstract
A method was developed to predict spoilage of minced meat at chill temperatures, based on the difference in proton efflux from and influx into bacterial cells. This difference depends on the number of organisms present, the available glucose in the meat sample and the ability of the organisms to metabolize amino acids. The proton efflux/influx of a meat filtrate containing bacteria was measured at 25 degrees C with a pH/ion meter in the presence of peptone with or without glucose. There was a noticeable rate of change of mV h-1 of the meat filtrate prior to the organoleptic detection of spoilage which may be used semi-predictively to determine the remaining shelf-life of meat at different storage temperatures. The method could be investigated further, encompassing type and relative numbers of organisms, incubation temperature, meat type and composition (i.e. available glucose) to produce a spoilage prediction model. The method does not require sophisticated equipment, only a standard pH/ion meter, is cheap, needing only peptone and glucose, is relatively simple, and takes less than 2 h to perform.