1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to methods for microbiological testing of powdered, granular, fibrous, or other products which have the capacity to absorb moisture, including food products such as almonds and pistachios. In particular, it relates to methods for economizing use of enrichment medium used during test procedures.
2. Description of the Related Art
Almonds and pistachios often need to be tested for harmful bacteria. To make tests for bacteria more effective, samples of nuts or nut kernels are soaked in a water solution containing nutrients, also known as an enrichment medium. The enrichment medium is typically designed to promote the growth of a particular bacteria, and it sometimes also discourages growth of competing bacteria. Due to specialized nutrient content and preparation steps required, enrichment media can be expensive. This is particularly so with products such as almonds and pistachios when testing protocols require large sample sizes. Testing with large samples requires a substantial volume of enrichment medium.
In prior art testing protocols, much enrichment medium is not efficiently used. Nuts tend to have interiors which are dry and capable of absorbing large amounts of liquid. Thus, when enrichment medium is added to a batch of nuts, much of it is absorbed into the interiors of the kernels. Since harmful bacteria are typically hosted on the exposed portions of nuts, not inside the solid kernels, prior art application of enrichment medium directly to nuts does not contribute to the testing process, with much of the medium being absorbed into nut interiors and therefore essentially wasted. The present inventor has observed that two volumes of enrichment medium added to one volume of nuts will sometimes result in only one-half volume of free liquid. Thus, 75% of the added medium ends up merely adding moisture to the interiors of the nut kernels, rather than providing a useful growth environment for the bacteria located upon the surfaces of the nut.
Thus, it is desirable that a way be found to conserve the use of expensive enrichment medium when doing laboratory testing of moisture-absorbing granular products, including food products such as nuts.
It is also desirable that a way be found to locate the expensive enrichment medium at the surfaces of the nut shells and kernels where it can do the most good, rather than inside the nut kernels where bacteria do not tend to exist anyway.
It is particularly desirable that a way be found to reduce the cost of laboratory testing of granular products by providing for a more efficient way to use expensive enrichment medium.
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to conserve the use of expensive enrichment medium when doing laboratory tests of moisture-absorbing food products such as nuts.
It is also an object of the present invention to locate the expensive enrichment medium at the surfaces of nut kernels and shells where it can do the most good, rather than inside the nut kernels where bacteria do not tend to exist anyway.
Further, it is an object of the present invention to minimize the cost of laboratory testing of granular products by providing for a more efficient way to use expensive enrichment medium materials. Lower cost tests will allow the industry to conduct more tests within the current food safety budget, thus improving overall food safety.
To achieve these and other objects, the present invention provides for pre-soaking, wherein nuts are pre-soaked with an inexpensive liquid such as water, so that the nut kernels become saturated. Then, when enrichment medium is added, the pre-soaked nut kernels are unable to absorb more liquid into their interiors, and the enrichment medium tends to bathe just the exterior of the nuts and nut kernels, rather than being absorbed into the interiors. Since the enrichment medium is now not being absorbed into the interiors of the nuts, much less medium is required to provide a liquid environment for that place on the nuts where bacteria are likely to be living, that is, on the surfaces of the nut shells and nut kernels. The inexpensive pre-soak liquid could be just pure water, however, it is preferable that a solute be added that will protect bacteria against osmotic shock and other harms. One preferable pre-soak liquid would be a 0.5% by weight solution of sodium chloride in water.
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This invention is useful with other types of nuts such as almonds, but more generally with any form of granular material that must be tested for the presence of bacteria, in situations where the bacteria are most likely to be on the surface of the grains of the granular material and where the interiors of the grains are capable of absorbing liquid, thus secluding enrichment medium into a place where it cannot do any good. The granular material may also be in very fine form, such as in wheat flour or other forms of powders since, on a smaller scale, these are still granular, and have particles of sufficient size to seclude enrichment medium in their interiors.
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The many features and advantages of the invention are apparent from the detailed specification, and thus, it is intended by the appended claims to cover all such features and advantages of the invention which fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. Further, since numerous modifications and variations will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is not desired to limit the invention to the exact methods illustrated and described, and accordingly, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be resorted to, falling within the scope of the invention. This invention is not limited by the particular physical form of the powder, grain, or other material to be tested. For example, this invention is also applicable to fibers that are capable of absorbing water. A key concept of this invention is the pre-wetting of the material so that water is absorbed into the interior volume of the product rather than more expensive enrichment solution.
This application is based upon Provisional Application 61/269,469 filed Jul. 21, 2009 and is a continuation of Utility application Ser. No. 12/803,820 filed Jul. 6, 2010.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12803820 | Jul 2010 | US |
Child | 13176424 | US |