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Appl Environ Microbiol, January 1998, p. 192-196, Vol. 64, No. 1
Food Research and Development Center,
Received 30 January 1997/Accepted 17 October 1997
Four inoculation techniques were compared for initiation of growth
on cake surfaces: spot, air cabinet, spray (atomizer), and talc
addition methods. Molds were isolated from commercial cakes and were
identified as Aspergillus sydowii, Aspergillus ochraceus, Penicillium funiculosum, and
Eurotium herbariorum. Cake surfaces were inoculated with
mold spores and incubated under three equilibrium relative humidity
(ERH) levels: 97, 85, and 75%. Random contamination by spores in a
ventilated air cabinet was the simplest method of
inoculation, but standard deviations in the inoculation
rates (20% on a relative scale) were almost twice those observed with
the other methods. The spot method was the most reproducible. Cake
samples inoculated in the air cabinet had colony counts 10 times lower
than those obtained for potato dextrose agar plates at 97% ERH, which
was not the case with the spray and talc methods. Growth of molds was
much slower in the samples incubated in 75% relative humidity, with
all methods. Colony counts were generally similar in systems adjusted
at 85 to 97% ERH but were lower for samples incubated at 75% ERH. In comparisons of the shelf life estimates obtained by the various inoculation methods, a correlation coefficient
(r2) of 0.70 was obtained between the
spot method and the other methods of inoculation, while talc, air
cabinet, and spray shelf life data were correlated better
(r2
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Effect of Inoculation Techniques and Relative
Humidity on the Growth of Molds on the Surfaces of Yellow Layer Cakes
0.97). The spot method appeared
to be the method of choice in consideration of ease of use, precision,
and the ability to enable the study of the effects of the environment
on mold-free shelf life as well as on the rate of growth of molds on
cakes.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Food Research
and Development Center, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, 3600 Casavant Blvd., St.-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada J2S 8E3. Phone: (514) 773-1105. Fax: (514) 773-8461. E-mail: FUSTIERP{at}EM.AGR.CA.
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