ABSTRACT
This study aimed to investigate the influence of adding an alkalizing agent to the scalding water of a slaughterhouse in Brazil to inactivate hygiene indicator bacteria in pig carcasses. Scalding is critical during carcass processing because slaughterhouses' scalding water is constantly renewed; therefore, it is usually contaminated with organic matter, such as faeces and dirt from the previous carcasses. The treatments evaluated consisted of counting Enterobacteriaceae and mesophilic bacteria in pork jowls at 62 °C, 65 °C, 68 C, and 72 °C after 0.0, 1.5, 3.0, 4.5, 6.0, and 7.5 min of simulated scalding at the pHs of 7.0 (control) and 11.0 (after addition of alkalizing agent). Decimal reduction times of hygiene indicator bacteria for all treatments were estimated with different nonlinear bacterial inactivation models. As a result, adding the alkalizing agent did not significantly inactivate most of the bacteria in the studied samples. However, it contributed to the inactivation of some bacteria, mostly belonging to the mesophilic group, at some specific temperatures. The results obtained in the current study can provide useful insights into dealing with pig carcass contamination in a real-world scenario and applying the obtained information in the industrial environment.