Bernard Guyot
University of Montpellier
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Bernard Guyot.
Current Microbiology | 2001
Sylvie Avallone; Bernard Guyot; Jean-Marc Brillouet; Eugenia J. Olguin; Joseph-Pierre Guiraud
The coffee fermentation microflora were rich and mainly constituted of aerobic Gram-negative bacilli, with Erwinia and Klebsiella genuses at the highest frequencies. The best population increase was observed with lactic acid bacteria and yeasts, whereas those microorganisms that counted on a pectin medium remained constant during the fermentation step. Qualitatively, lactic acid bacteria belonged mainly to Leuconostoc mesenteroides species but the others microflora were relatively heterogeneous. The microorganisms isolated on pectin medium were Enterobacteriaceae, identified as Erwinia herbicola and Klebsiella pneumoniae, not reported as strong pectolytic strains. Throughout coffee fermentation, 60% of the simple sugars were degraded by the total microflora and not specifically by pectolytic microorganisms.
Food Additives and Contaminants Part A-chemistry Analysis Control Exposure & Risk Assessment | 2010
Daniel Duris; Joseph K. Mburu; Noël Durand; Renata Clarke; John M. Frank; Bernard Guyot
This study set out to assess the relative importance of sound and unsound beans in a batch of coffee with regard to ochratoxin A (OTA) contamination. Initially, unsound beans were found to account for 95% of contamination in a batch of coffee, whatever the methods used for post–harvest processing. It was also found that beans displaying traces of attacks by Colletotrichum kahawae were the greatest contributors to OTA contamination. In a second stage, the study compared the contamination of sound beans with that of beans attacked by Colletotrichum kahawae. On average, beans attacked by Colletotrichum kahawae had a statistically higher OTA content than sound beans (18.0 µg kg−1 as opposed to 1.2 µg kg−1). In addition, the average OTA content in unsound beans varied depending on growing conditions.
Food Additives and Contaminants Part A-chemistry Analysis Control Exposure & Risk Assessment | 2007
Pauline Mounjouenpou; Noël Durand; Bernard Guyot; Joseph P. Guiraud
Operating conditions affect ochratoxin A (OTA) extraction from roasted coffee. The OTA content found in the beverage can thus be greater than that found in the roasted coffee used to prepare it. Three extraction parameters were studied for roasted coffee: type of extraction solvent (alkaline, neutral, acid), temperature (ambient temperature/23°C, 60°C and 85°C), and extraction time (5, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 and 80u2009min). The alkaline solvent used in the method recommended by the European Union extracted OTA better, but a maximum content was obtained at 60°C after 50u2009min. At least a 100% improvement in extraction was obtained when compared with the European Union usual quantification method that is carried out at ambient temperature. It turned out that the OTA extraction parameters for roasted coffee, as defined by that method, were not optimum and needed to be modified. These results were verified in double-extraction experiments showing that OTA is not completely extracted by this method. Confirmation was obtained by comparison of extraction methods on several commercial samples of roasted coffee.
World Mycotoxin Journal | 2011
Pauline Mounjouenpou; Dominique Gueule; Mama Ntoupka; Noël Durand; Angélique Fontana-Tachon; Bernard Guyot; Joseph-Pierre Guiraud
Ochratoxin A (OTA) is a mycotoxin that contaminates several foodstuffs, including cocoa. It has nephrotoxic, teratogenic and carcinogenic properties in humans. The effect of post-harvest processing and storage on the OTA contamination of cocoa was studied over three successive cocoa seasons (2005, 2006 and 2007) in Cameroon. The type of fermentation (box or heap) did not significantly influence bean OTA content, which varied from undetectable (<0.03 ng/g) to 0.25 ng/g, remaining below 2 ng/g (the defined standard for cocoa beans). However, pod damage and late pod opening were aggravating factors for OTA contamination of cocoa. If pods were not intact (intentionally or naturally damaged), OTA was found in samples with contents of up to 75.5 ng/g before processing and 32.2 ng/g after 4 months storage. This contamination exceeded the levels tolerated for export. In addition, some of the cocoa produced is processed locally and consumed as chocolate, cocoa powder, chocolate filled sweets, cocoa-based drinks a...
International Journal of Food Science and Technology | 2004
Mirna Suárez-Quiroz; Oscar Gonzalez-Rios; Michel Barel; Bernard Guyot; Sabine Schorr-Galindo; Joseph-Pierre Guiraud
Journal of Food Composition and Analysis | 2007
Oscar Gonzalez-Rios; Mirna Suárez-Quiroz; Renaud Boulanger; Michel Barel; Bernard Guyot; Joseph-Pierre Guiraud; Sabine Schorr-Galindo
Journal of Food Composition and Analysis | 2007
Oscar Gonzalez-Rios; Mirna Suárez-Quiroz; Renaud Boulanger; Michel Barel; Bernard Guyot; Joseph-Pierre Guiraud; Sabine Schorr-Galindo
International Journal of Food Science and Technology | 2002
Sylvie Avallone; Jean-Marc Brillouet; Bernard Guyot; Eugenia J. Olguin; Joseph-Pierre Guiraud
International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2005
Mirna Suárez-Quiroz; Oscar Gonzalez-Rios; Michel Barel; Bernard Guyot; Sabine Schorr-Galindo; Joseph-Pierre Guiraud
International Journal of Food Science and Technology | 2005
Mirna Suárez-Quiroz; Béatrice De Louise; Oscar Gonzalez-Rios; Michel Barel; Bernard Guyot; Sabine Schorr-Galindo; Joseph-Pierre Guiraud
Collaboration
Dive into the Bernard Guyot's collaboration.
Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
View shared research outputs