Towards low-spore milk powders: A review on microbiological challenges of dairy powder production with focus on aerobic mesophilic and thermophilic spores

Carolin Wedel, Zeynep Atamer, Anna Dettling, Mareike Wenning, Siegfried Scherer, Jörg Hinrichs

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

Powdered milk products, such as skim milk powder or whey protein powder, represent a large fraction of the dairy sector, especially with respect to export. In the past years, the contamination with aerobic endospore-forming bacteria has become one of the main factors to evaluate microbial powder quality. Besides mesophilic spore formers, thermophilic and thermoresistant species have been isolated all over the world. During production of powdered commodities, milk or intermediate products go through several process steps. This review highlights and discusses individual production steps and their effect on the microbiota and the spore count. The plant cleaning and its influence on spore resistance are discussed in detail, since this is the most important step in controlling recontamination and persistence. Finally, future technologies to reduce spore counts during powder production are presented. The contribution on ‘non-thermal’ and novel technologies towards low-spore milk powders are discussed critically.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105252
JournalInternational Dairy Journal
Volume126
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2022

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Towards low-spore milk powders: A review on microbiological challenges of dairy powder production with focus on aerobic mesophilic and thermophilic spores'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this