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foodsafetylab/Pinto-2023-Milk

Pinto-2023-Milk

Overview

Share tables (ST) are tables or stations in school cafeterias where students can return unopened foods and beverages, providing an opportunity to access these items at no cost. Currently, research suggests that milk is among the most wasted items in breakfast and lunch programs in the United States. Share tables present a simple solution for reducing milk waste, but research is needed to understand the microbial spoilage potential of milk in ST. To this end, uninoculated milk cartons and milk cartons inoculated with 2 to 3 log10(cfu/mL) Pseudomonas poae, a fast-growing psychrotroph, was exposed to ambient temperature during winter (mean temperature = 20.3°C) and summer (23.1°C) for 125 min, repeated over 5 d (the length of a school week). Microbial counts in the inoculated milk cartons increased linearly, exceeding the spoilage threshold of 6.0 log10(cfu/mL) after d 3 and after d 4 in the winter and summer season trials, respectively. In the winter trial, the microbial counts for uninoculated milk cartons never exceeded the lower limit of detection, 2.31 log10(cfu/mL), and in the summer trials, microbial counts never reached the spoilage threshold, indicating that initial contamination is a driving factor of microbial milk spoilage. Regardless of sharing status or seasonality, the greatest changes in counts for inoculated milk cartons occurred during overnight refrigeration, ranging from 0.56 to 1.4 log10(cfu/mL), while during the share table ranged from no observable change up to 0.29 log10(cfu/mL), emphasizing that school nutrition personnel should focus efforts on tightly controlling refrigeration temperatures and returning milk to refrigeration as soon as possible. A previously developed model for school cafeteria share tables was adapted to understand the typical residence time of milk in a simulated cafeteria with an ambient temperature share table for the summer and winter seasons over 1,000 wk. Milk was predicted to have a very short mean residence time (85 min) regardless of sharing status or season, with 99.8% of milk consumed, discarded, or donated within the first 2 d. As a result, only 3 out of 451,410 and 6 out of 451,410 simulated milks spoiled in the winter and summer seasons, respectively. The data generated here can be used to inform science-based decision-making for including milk in share tables, or applied to any system where one might have to accept short-term unrefrigerated storage of milk to meet a waste reduction or food security goal.

Usage

Setup

Mention the environment the code was run on during development and testing as well as any dependencies that are needed.

Running

Explain in detailed steps how to run the code in order to reproduce the results shown above in the results section.

Authors

You can view the list of authors in the AUTHORS file.

Contact

Corresponding author: Matthew J. Stasiewicz
103 Agricultural Bioprocess Lab
1302 W. Pennsylvania
Urbana, IL, 1361801
USA
+1-217-265-0963
mstasie@illinois.edu

Citation

Pinto, G., G. A. Reyes, P. Corea, M. Pflugh Prescott, and M. J. Stasiewicz. 2024. Time and temperature abuse of milk in conditions representing a school cafeteria share table does not meaningfully reduce microbial quality. Journal of Dairy Science. 107:2733-2747.

License

This project's code is licensed under the GNU General Public License v3.0 and dataset is licensed the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 International license. Please see the LICENSE.code and LICENSE.dataset files for details.

Funding

This project was supported by the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture award number: [2021-68008-34106]. Any opinions, findings, or recommendations in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the view of the USDA. The authors have not stated any conflicts of interest.