An overview concerning methodologies applied to guarantee fruits and vegetables safety

Bárbara Ramos, Teresa R. S. Brandão, Paula Teixeira, Cristina L. M. Silva*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to conferenceAbstractpeer-review

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Abstract

The demand for fresh vegetable and fruit salads has increased in recent years. These foods are minimal processed and can be a vehicle of several pathogens. The microorganisms most frequently linked to produce-related outbreaks include bacteria (Salmonella spp., Listeria monocytogenes, Escherichia coli; Shigella spp.), viruses (Norwalk-like, hepatitis A), and parasites (Cryptosporidium spp., Cyclospora spp.). Contamination of fresh fruits and vegetables is of special concern, because such produce is likely to be consumed raw, without any type of microbiologically lethal processing, thus may cause potential safety problems. There are many different technologies to reduce/eliminate the microorganisms contaminants of foods, such as blanching and pasteurization. However, some should not be applied to fruits and vegetables, without compromising the fresh characteristics of these products. In attempt to improve the microbial status of these valuable foods, a number of chemical (washings with chlorine, chlorine dioxide, organic acids, ozone, electrolysed water) and physical methods (irradiation, ultraviolet light) are also alternatively used. The objective of this work is to gather information concerning the effectiveness and advantages/limitations of all these methodologies.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages1
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2009
Event2009 EFFoST Annual Conference - New Challenges in Food Preservation: Processing – Safety - Sustainability - Budapest, Hungary
Duration: 11 Nov 200913 Nov 2009

Conference

Conference2009 EFFoST Annual Conference - New Challenges in Food Preservation
Country/TerritoryHungary
CityBudapest
Period11/11/0913/11/09

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