Research Article

CHILLING RATE OF COOKED RICE AND RISK OF Bacillus cereus GROWTH IN RESTAURANT OPERATION

Volume: 2 Number: 4 September 20, 2016
  • Nezih Müftügil
EN

CHILLING RATE OF COOKED RICE AND RISK OF Bacillus cereus GROWTH IN RESTAURANT OPERATION

Abstract

The emetic syndrome of B. cereus food poisoning is often connected with consumption of rice.  When cooked rice is cooled slowly and stored between 10°C to 50°C B. cereus spores germinate and reach numbers high enough to cause illness.

Cooked rice is often slowly chilled in most of the restaurants. In the absence of rapid cooling instruments such as blast chiller and cold room, cooked rice, as a common practice is kept at room temperature for cooling for a long time before putting into a refrigerator.

In this study, cooked rice in 10 cm deep in a pan was chilled in a blast chiller, cold room, refrigerator and at ambient and the cooling rates between the temperature zone of 50ºC to 10ºC were determined. Except the chilling in a blast chiller, in no other chilling methods the instructed/recommended four hours chilling time was achieved.  Chilling of rice from 50ºC to 10ºC in a refrigerator took 12.5-13.5 hours. Chilling time came down to around 10 hours when thickness of rice in the pan was reduced to 5 cm. Chilling time was much longer (15.5-16.5 hours) when the rice was held at ambient until the centre temperature was 30 ºC before putting into the refrigerator. It is obvious that the commonly applied rice chilling in the restaurants is not safe. Some other practical ways other than reducing the thickness of rice should also be applied.

Keywords

References

  1. Agata, N., Ohta, M. & Yokoyama, K. (2002). Production of Bacillus cereus emetic toxin (cereulide) in various foods. International Journal of Food Microbiology, 73, 23-27.
  2. Arnesen, S.L.P., Fagerlund, A. & Granum, PE. (2008). From soil to gut: Bacillus cereus and its food poisoning toxins. FEMS Microbiology Reviews, 32, 579-606.
  3. Andersson, A., Ronner, U. & Granum, P.E. (1995). What problems does the food industry have with the spore-forming pathogenes Bacillus cereus and Clostridium perfirengens? International Journal of Food Microbiology, 28(2), 145-155.
  4. Becker, H., Schaller, G., Von Wiese, W. & Terplan, G. (1994). Bacillus cereus in infant’s foods and dried milk products. International Journal of Food Microbiology, 23(1), 1-15.
  5. Drobniewski, F.A. (1993). Bacillus cereus and related species. Clinical Microbiology Reviews, 6(4), 324-338.
  6. EFSA (2012). The European Union summary report on trends and sources of zoonoses, zoonotic agents and foodborne outbreaks in 2011. EFSA Journal, 10(3), 2597.
  7. FDA (2012). Bad bug book: Foodborne pathogenic microorganism and natural toxins handbook, 2nd ed. US Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, 93-96.
  8. FDA (1997). Food Code. U.S. Dept. Of Health and Human Services. Public Health Service. Food and Drug Administration, Pub. No. PB97-141204. Washington, D.C.

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

-

Journal Section

Research Article

Authors

Nezih Müftügil This is me
OKAN ÜNİVERSİTESİ
Türkiye

Publication Date

September 20, 2016

Submission Date

July 27, 2016

Acceptance Date

September 18, 2016

Published in Issue

Year 1970 Volume: 2 Number: 4

APA
Müftügil, N. (2016). CHILLING RATE OF COOKED RICE AND RISK OF Bacillus cereus GROWTH IN RESTAURANT OPERATION. Food and Health, 2(4), 184-188. https://doi.org/10.3153/JFHS16019

16339

Journal is licensed under a

CreativeCommons Attribtion-ShareAlike 4.0 International Licence  14627 1331027042
Diamond Open Access refers to a scholarly publication model in which journals and platforms do not charge fees to either authors or readers.

Open Access Statement:

This is an open access journal which means that all content is freely available without charge to the user or his/her institution. Users are allowed to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles, or use them for any other lawful purpose, without asking prior permission from the publisher or the author. This is in accordance with the BOAI definition of open access.

Archiving Policy:

27222

Archiving is done according to ULAKBİM "DergiPark" publication policy (LOCKSS).