Assessment of microbiological quality of ready-to-eat foods in institutions providing mass feeding
Keywords:
ready-to-eat food, hygiene, microbiological quality, public healthAbstract
Objective: This study was designed to evaluate microbiological quality of ready-to-eat foods in institutional
mass feeding and to determine their risk for food poisoning. In the study, 275 ready-to-serve food
samples were evaluated in institutional feeding. The food groupings in the Turkish Food Codex Regulation
Supplementary Document I and parameters established in food safety criteria in Supplementary Document I
and III were adopted. The samples were analyzed for parameters about coagulase-positive Staphylococci (TS
EN ISO 6888-1/A1), B. cereus (TS EN ISO 7932), E. coli (TS ISO 16649-2), Staphylococcal enterotoxins
(AOAC OMA) 2007.06 - VIDAS SET 2), Salmonella spp. (TS EN ISO 6579-1), L. monocytogenes (TS EN
ISO 11290-1) and mold - yeast (TS ISO 21527-1/2) by reference methods. Of the samples analyzed, 250
samples (90.9%) were found appropriate for consumption while 25 samples (9.1%) as inappropriate according
to Microbiological Criteria Regulation. It was concluded that meats served warm carry risk for L. monocytogenes,
B. cereus and E. coli parameters while salads-appetizers served cool carry risk for L. monocytogenes and
Salmonella spp. and deserts, particularly cream cakes, carry risk for E. coli and mold - yeast parameters.
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