Popis: |
Strips of plate meat were sprayed with acetic acid, sodium hypochlorite, or tap water after they were washed with 0, 12.7, or 25.4 liters of tap water/min. Washing before sanitizing lowered bacteria counts significantly only when the higher volume of water, 1.4 ml/cm2, was applied, and this difference existed for samples taken immediately but not 48 h after treatment. Reductions in counts exceeded 99.9% when samples washed with 25.4 liters/min (1.4 ml/cm2) were sanitized with 3% acetic acid. This sanitizer was sprayed at the rate of 6.8 liters/min (1.9 ml/cm2) at a pressure of 14.0 kg/cm2 from a distance of 40 cm as the meat moved at 2 cm/sec through the spray. Under comparable conditions of application, both sodium hypochlorite (200 to 250 mg/liter) and tap water reduced counts by about 90%. Acetic acid had a much greater residual effect on numbers of viable bacteria than did hypochlorite. No effect of air drying was observed. |