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Investigations on staphylococci from raw beef sourcesOthman, Y. M. January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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Factors affecting carotenoid bioavailability in raw and processed tomato and carrotGambelli, Luisa January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Optimisation of environmental conditions for unwrapped chilled foods on displayMaidment, Graeme G. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Local (intestinal) and systemic responses of animals to ingested soyabean Glycine max proteins, antinutritional effects of lectin and trypsin inhibitorsGrant, George January 1988 (has links)
The poor growth of young rats fed fully supplemented diets containing raw soyabean appeared to be due to interference with local (intestinal) metabolism, resulting in apparently poor digestion and absorption of dietary nitrogen, coupled with changes in systemic intermediary metabolism, leaning to low overall retention of absorbed nitrogen and slightly incresed catabolism of body lipid. Low serum insulin concentrations and pancreas and small intestine enlargement were also evident. These changes were due to a number of anti-nutritional factors in soyabean: 1. Trypsin inhibitors (Kunitz + Bowman-Birk) depressed growth rate by reducing digestion and absorption of dietary nitrogen and interfering with retention of absorbed nitrogen. They also induced considerable enlargement of the pancreas. 2. The lectin inhibited growth primarily as a result of interference with retention of absorbed nitrogen. It also caused enlargement of the pancreas and of the small intestine. 3. Anti-nutritional factor/s, devoid of haemagglutinating or trypsin inhibitory activity, caused a loss of muscle and also possibly increased production and secretion of mucus in the small intestine. The poor growth of young soyabean-fed animals was thus due to the combined effects of these anti-nutritional factors. As the rats matured, the inhibitory effects of soyabean upon growth diminished and, after 16-24 weeks on the diet, were negligible. On the other hand, pancreas enlargement persisted upon long-term (up to 96 weeks) feeding with raw soyabean. Enlargement of the whole gastrointestinal tract was also evident upon prolonged soyabean feeding. With rats kept for more than 1 year on soyabean diet, there was apparently an increased incidence (approximately 15%) of pre-cancerous or cancerous changes in the pancreas. This amy have been due, in part, to a synergism between the lectin and trypsin inhibitors and unsaturated lipids. Aqueous heat-treatment greatly reduced but did not eliminate the anti-nutritional effects of soyabean. Pre-treatment of meal with hot aqueous ethanol was more effective.
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Cloning and expression of antibody fragments for detection of Listeria monocytogenes in foodDubbels, Anne M. January 1996 (has links)
Single chain Fv (scFv) and Fv antibody fragments derived from a monoclonal antibody recognising flagellae of Listeria species were cloned, expressed and purified from Escherichia coli. ScFv and Fv were purified by affinity chromatography on anti-flagellar and anti-hydrophil 2 affinity columns respectively. These fragments successfully compete with the parent monoclonal antibody for antigen binding but do not complete with a second monoclonal antibody which recognises a different epitope on the flagellae. The amount of antibody fragments expressed has been estimated as 0.1 mg 1-1 for scFc and 0.22 mg 1-1 for Fv. The relative affinities of the scFv, Fv and parental monoclonal antibody for binding to antigen were compared. Characterisation of ScFv by antigen binding profile showed it to have a sensitivity of the same order of magnitude as the parent monoclonal. Fv had a sensitivity one order of magnitude below that of the parent monoclonal and the scFv. ScFv was purified as a dimer and analysed by HPLC size exclusion chromatography. The variable heavy region (VH) sequence has been determined for a second anti-flagellar monoclonal antibody and this has been cloned into an E. coli expression vector. An IgM monoclonal antibody with broad range specificity to bacteria has been generated and the VH sequence determined.
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Taking back power in a brutal food system: food sovereignty in South AfricaCherry, Jane 28 July 2016 (has links)
MA RESEARCH REPORT
Prepared for the Department of Development Studies, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
June 2016 / This research argues that food sovereignty offers a plausible alternative to the current unjust, unsafe and unsustainable food system in South Africa. In addition, it argues that food sovereignty provides important solutions to hunger and the brutalities of the food system which current policies and interventions fail to address. Food sovereignty is an ideal that originated amongst a peasant movement in the global South. This ideal and framework to address hunger has since evolved and spread to international movements, and is making great strides in advocating for change in the current broken food system. Food sovereignty has lately been adapted in South Africa as a grassroots led initiative promoted by the nascent South African Food Sovereignty Campaign (SAFSC). This research uses the SAFSC as a case study to explore food sovereignty alternatives in South Africa. It does this by using in-depth interviews and participant observation in the campaign to draw out understandings of food sovereignty particular to South African activists. It further assesses tactics and strategies the SAFSC uses, and compares these to current state, business and civil society organisations’ solutions to show how a more grassroots-led approach, using the food sovereignty framework, has the potential to address the roots of hunger. These roots of hunger are shown to be at the corporate food regime level, as has been indicated by the literature and confirmed in this research. As food sovereignty is pursued by various actors in South Africa it provides important examples of approaches by which power in the food system can be reclaimed to benefit the majority instead of a few elites, as is currently the case.
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Application of hazard analysis (HACCP) in starch production by the wet milling of maizeSamuels, RC January 1993 (has links)
Thesis (Masters Diploma (Food Technology))--Cape Technikon, Cape Town,1993 / This study is based on the Hazard Analysis in the Wet Milling of maize for the production
of starch at the Bellville plant of African Products.
Wet milling of maize is a highly specific and completely integrated system developed to
separate the major components of the kernel as completely as possible. Many
microbiological problems existed in the process at this plant which could not be solved over
the years.
Microbial analyses were done throughout the plant and high microbial counts were obtained
at various sampling points. In applying HACCP, the following major hazards were
identified:
The presence of Faecal Streptococci, Sraphylococcus aureus, Bacillus cereus, Faecal
coliforms, Fusarium, Dip/odia, Aspergillus, Penicillium and various Yeast strains.
The follOWing Critical Control Points (CCP's) were identified in the wet milling process:
Maize trucks, in-process water, steeping, storage tanks, Reineveld, wet mlxmg boxes,
Laidlaw, drying and bagging off point.
The follOWing were done as part of the HACCP plan:
i) modifications of the plant were suggested,
ii) different sanitation programmes were evaluated,
iii) monitoring of cep's, and
iv) training of personnel.
In general, a regular sanitation programme need to be exercised in the wet-milling plant to
prevent a build up of microbial populations at various sampling points. High S02 levels can
be maintained throughout the plant to achieve this. The final starch will then be used for
Industrial starch.
Criteria to monitor the CCP's were suggested. Hazard Analysis is an effective method to
improve the quality of the final product.
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The statistical treatment of sensory analysis dataLangron, Stephen P. January 1981 (has links)
Sensory analysis, that is the description of food or beverages by a panel of judges, has become increasingly important in the development of commercial foodstuffs. In general terms, sensory analysis involves scoring, for intensity, the adjectives of a vocabulary which adequately describes every nuance of sensory property found in the sample. The data from a sensory analysis of a set of samples are matrices of scores, one for each judge, with rows corresponding to adjectives, and columns to samples. This can be interpreted as a set of configurations, one for each judge, where points correspond to samples, and dimensions to adjectives. The question of how to combine the scores by each judge to summarise the information on the samples, is of particular interest. This thesis concentrates on combining judge scores by generalized Procrustes analysis, the method of simultaneously matching a set of configurations by translation, rotation/reflection and scaling. This analysis has intrinsic appeal as it allows each judge to have his own interpretation of the adjectives. The only constraint is that the judges must place samples in the same relative positions within their own private scoring schemes. The asymptotic distribution of the residual sum of squares after a generalized Procrustes analysis is discussed, and the sum of squares before transformation is shown to partition into sums of squares for translation, rotation/reflection scaling and a residual. Therefore, the effects of the Procrustes transformations can be presented in an ANOVA format. The use of complementary pair-wise Procrustes rotation is shown to be made redundant by a modification to the generalized Procrustes analysis, which gives a Euclidean representation of the judges. A worked example illustrates the advantage, over the panel mean, of a generalized Procrustes analysis, and a summary of the sample information by the consensus configuration.
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The physiological and ecological characteristics of the red bread mouldYassin, M. Salleh B. M. January 1980 (has links)
Physiological studies of type cultures of Neurospora crassa, N. sitophila, and N. intermedia in terms of growth on bread, effects of heat flashes, water activity, food additives and viability of stored conidia revealed no differences in either environmental or substrate preferences among the species on which a classification could be based. 345 putative wild isolates of Neurospora were collected from a wide variety of sources - silage, Indonesian ontjom, wheat grains, flour, bread, crumpets, bakery air and bakery dust. These all grew more vigorously than the type cultures. They were compared with respect to morphological traits such as conidial colour and size, and degree of protoperitheciality, but these features again proved inadequate to distinguish between species. The wild isolates were crossed with tester strains which were derived or synthesized from isolates in the collection and authenticated with reference strains from the Fungal Genetics Stock Center and the Commonwealth Mycological Institute. The times required in these crosses for perithecium formation and ascospore ejection, and the perithecial pattern and percentage of dark-coloured ascospores produced were investigated. The latter proved to be an unambiguous and highly reproducible diagnostic character for species delineation. Neurospora crassa accounted for the bulk of the collection, conflicting with the popular view that N. sitophila is the principal Neurospora contaminant of bread. Only heterothallic strains of both mating types of N. crassa, N. sitophila, and N. intermedia were represented. Based on six characteristics (conidial colour, mating-type, protoperitheciality and percentage dark-coloured ascospores with the three species testers), the isolates of bakery origin were grouped into 112 individual strains. Such variability indicated that there was continual infection in these bakeries from a large population of strains estimated from analysis based upon the Poisson distribution to be about 170. Based on this finding, a model of the probable infection cycle of Neurospora in bakeries is described.
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The yeasts and their chemical changes in the British fresh sausageDalton, Hilary Karen January 1985 (has links)
Seven hundred and seventeen yeasts isolated from samples of sulphited and unsulphited sausage, skinless sausage, minced beef, and ingredients intended for sausage manufacture, as well as air and equipment in a sausage factory were characterised in detail. Debaryomyces hansenii was the most commonly occurring yeast in the majority of samples of sausage and minced beef, followed by Candida zeylainoides and Pichia membranaefaciens. The presence of sulphite did not appear to influence the overall numbers or range of yeasts in sausage but did affect their relative proportions such that the incidence of D. hansenii was higher and that of certain Cryptoccoccus and Rhodotorula spp. was lower in samples containing the preservative. The heat treatment of skinless sausages during processing appeared to reduce the incidence of D. hansenii. The factory survey showed that the meat intended for sausage manufacture and also other ingredients as well as equipment harboured the same range of yeasts as were found in the finished product. A yeast flora dominated by Trichosporon cutaneum was isolated from pig carcasses immediately following slaughter. This flora was found to be confined largely to the equipment and air of the slaughter area and lairage. In general, the yeast flora of sausage was non-fermentative but could assimilate a wide range of carbohydrates. Selected strains of C. curvata, C. lipolytica var. lipolytica, C. zeylanoides, Cr. albidus, D. hansenii, P. membranaefaciens and Torulopsis candia were shown to synthesise either extra cellular lipases and/or amylases but not proteases in broth culture. Sulphite binding compounds, principally acetaldehyde, were produced in lab lemco broth (pH 7.0) containing sulphite (500 mug g-1) during the exponential phase of growth of representative strains of D. hansenii, C. zeylanoides, P. membranaefaciens and T. candida but not Cr. albidus var. albidus and Rh. rubra. The extent of sulphite binding in minced pork- belly supplemented with sulphite (500 mug g-1) was appreciably greater in samples inoculated with D. hansenii than in those inoculated with representatives of the other members of the microbial association, Brochothrix thermosphacta, Lactobacillus sp. and a pseudomonad. The content of sulphite binding agents in minced pork was found to be positively related (r = 0.98, 0.92 at 1 and 15°C respectively) to the size of the yeast population. The concentration of acetaldehyde in stored sausages obtained from a factory and also those obtained from retail outlets was correlated with the concentration of bound sulphite (r = 0.89). The rate and extent of sulphite binding and acetaldehyde production was fastest during the exponential phase of yeast growth in sausages.
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