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Dive into the research topics where Manuela Del Torre is active.

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Featured researches published by Manuela Del Torre.


Meat Science | 2009

Changes of physicochemical, microbiological, and textural properties during ripening of Italian low-acid sausages. Proteolysis, sensory and volatile profiles.

M. Spaziani; Manuela Del Torre; Mara Lucia Stecchini

In this study low-acid sausages were studied to characterize their physicochemical, microbiological, and textural properties during ripening. The final a(w) was 0.87-0.88, whereas pH values stayed around their initial values during processing. Lactic acid bacteria increased very slowly in number and a small increase of Micrococcaceae was also noticed. Low-acid sausages showed low hardness and cohesiveness, and were easily distinguishable by sensory analysis from other industrial and artisan sausages. Under the conditions of the study, observed volatile compounds were mainly from spices and wine. The respective contribution of muscle and indigenous bacterial enzymes to proteolysis was determined by comparing changes in low-acid sausages to those containing an antibiotic-antimycotic mixture or sugar. A large part of the degradation of myofibrillar proteins appeared due to endogenous enzymes, although bacterial proteinases contributed to the degradation of these proteins. The role of microorganisms in proteolysis was more evident in the degradation of sarcoplasmic proteins.


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2000

Research on factors allowing a risk assessment of spore-forming pathogenic bacteria in cooked chilled foods containing vegetables: a FAIR collaborative project

Frédéric Carlin; Héléne Girardin; Michael W. Peck; Sandra C. Stringer; G. C. Barker; Antonio Martínez; Aurea Fernandez; Pablo S. Fernández; William M. Waites; Sara Movahedi; Frans van Leusden; Maarten Nauta; Roy Moezelaar; Manuela Del Torre; Sonia Litman

Vegetables are frequent ingredients of cooked chilled foods and are frequently contaminated with spore-forming bacteria (SFB). Therefore, risk assessment studies have been carried out, including the following: hazard identification and characterisation--from an extensive literature review and expertise of the participants, B. cereus and C. botulinum were identified as the main hazards; exposure assessment--consisting of determination of the prevalence of hazardous SFB in cooked chilled foods containing vegetables and in unprocessed vegetables, and identification of SFB representative of the bacterial community in cooked chilled foods containing vegetables, determination of heat-resistance parameters and factors affecting heat resistance of SFB, determination of the growth kinetics of SFB in vegetable substrate and of the influence of controlling factors, validation of previous work in complex food systems and by challenge testing and information about process and storage conditions of cooked chilled foods containing vegetables. The paper illustrates some original results obtained in the course of the project. The results and information collected from scientific literature or from the expertise of the participants are integrated into the microbial risk assessment, using both a Bayesian belief network approach and a process risk model approach, previously applied to other foodborne hazards.


Journal of Food Protection | 1998

Investigation of the ability of proteolytic Clostridium botulinum to multiply and produce toxin in fresh Italian pasta

Manuela Del Torre; Mara Lucia Stecchini; Michael W. Peck

The ability of proteolytic Clostridium botulinum (types A, B, and F) to produce toxin in filled fresh Italian pasta (tortelli) packed under a modified atmosphere was investigated. Four types of tortelli (filled with artichoke, meat, ricotta-spinach, or salmon) were inoculated with a suspension of heat-shocked spores to give an initial concentration of approximately 10(3) spores per piece. Samples were incubated at both 12 and 20 degrees C for up to 50 days and examined at selected time intervals for the presence of toxin by an ELISA and the mouse test. Toxin was not detected in any tortelli stored at 12 degrees C. When storage was at 20 degrees C, toxin was detected in the salmon-filled tortelli at day 30, in the meat and ricotta-spinach tortelli at day 50, but not in the artichoke-filled tortelli at day 50.


Food Microbiology | 2011

A simplified approach for modelling the bacterial growth/no growth boundary.

Pierluigi Polese; Manuela Del Torre; M. Spaziani; Mara Lucia Stecchini

A simplified growth/no growth (G/NG) model, conceptually derived from the Gamma model and making direct and explicit use of growth limits of bacteria through a normalization constant (η), was proposed. The η value, which quantifies the product of the cardinal optimal distances for growth probability, is a species-independent constant. This is of importance when experimental data is missing or insufficient. The simplified G/NG model was developed including the effect of temperature, pH and water activity, and was expanded incorporating the preservative effects. As a practical application, the model was investigated for its ability to describe published data. The successful validation of the simplified G/NG model is discussed in regard to its potential applicability as a first estimate method for the development of safe food products.


Archives of Microbiology | 2014

Involvement of alanine racemase in germination of Bacillus cereus spores lacking an intact exosporium

Elena Venir; Manuela Del Torre; Vincenzo Cunsolo; Rosaria Saletti; Rita Musetti; Mara Lucia Stecchini

The l-alanine mediated germination of food isolated Bacillus cereus DSA 1 spores, which lacked an intact exosporium, increased in the presence of d-cycloserine (DCS), which is an alanine racemase (Alr) inhibitor, reflecting the activity of the Alr enzyme, capable of converting l-alanine to the germination inhibitor d-alanine. Proteomic analysis of the alkaline extracts of the spore proteins, which include exosporium and coat proteins, confirmed that Alr was present in the B. cereus DSA 1 spores and matched to that encoded by B. cereus ATCC 14579, whose spore germination was strongly affected by the block of conversion of l- to d-alanine. Unlike ATCC 14579 spores, l-alanine germination of B. cereus DSA 1 spores was not affected by the preincubation with DCS, suggesting a lack of restriction in the reactant accessibility.


Journal of Food Protection | 2000

Growth of Bacillus cereus on Solid Media as Affected by Agar, Sodium Chloride, and Potassium Sorbate

Mara Lucia Stecchini; Manuela Del Torre; Stefania Donda; Enrico Maltini

The effect of two independent variables: microstructure, as modified by the agar content (1.0, 4.0, 7.0%), and water activity (a(w)), as modified by the NaCl content (0.5, 2.5, 4.5%), in the absence or in the presence of potassium sorbate (0.0; 2,000 ppm) on Bacillus cereus growth on solid media was studied. The time to visible growth (TVG) and the radial growth rate (RGR) of colonies were evaluated. TVG was not affected by microstructure and K-sorbate, although when a(w) was reduced, TVG tended to increase. RGR depended on linear effects of microstructure and a(w) variables and their interaction. When K-sorbate was added to cultural media, RGR was reduced significantly. However, in the presence of K-sorbate, RGR was found to change only when a(w) vas varied.


Italian Journal of Food Safety | 2018

Praedicere Possumus: An Italian web-based application for predictive microbiology to ensure food safety

Pierluigi Polese; Manuela Del Torre; Mara Lucia Stecchini

The use of predictive modelling tools, which mainly describe the response of microorganisms to a particular set of environmental conditions, may contribute to a better understanding of microbial behaviour in foods. In this paper, a tertiary model, in the form of a readily available and userfriendly web-based application Praedicere Possumus (PP) is presented with research examples from our laboratories. Through the PP application, users have access to different modules, which apply a set of published models considered reliable for determining the compliance of a food product with EU safety criteria and for optimising processing throughout the identification of critical control points. The application pivots around a growth/no-growth boundary model, coupled with a growth model, and includes thermal and non-thermal inactivation models. Integrated functionalities, such as the fractional contribution of each inhibitory factor to growth probability (f) and the time evolution of the growth probability (Pt), have also been included. The PP application is expected to assist food industry and food safety authorities in their common commitment towards the improvement of food safety.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 1998

Influence of Structural Properties and Kinetic Constraints on Bacillus cereus Growth

Mara Lucia Stecchini; Manuela Del Torre; Ileana Sarais; Onorio Saro; Mariella Messina; Enrico Maltini


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2001

Determination of peroxy radical-scavenging of lactic acid bacteria.

Mara Lucia Stecchini; Manuela Del Torre; Marina Munari


Journal of Food Engineering | 2007

Preparation of freeze-dried yoghurt as a space food

Elena Venir; Manuela Del Torre; Mara Lucia Stecchini; Enrico Maltini; Paolo Di Nardo

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Paolo Di Nardo

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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