Affiliation:
1. Food Research Institute, University of Wisconsin—Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A 2014 multistate listeriosis outbreak was linked to consumption of caramel-coated apples, an unexpected and previously unreported vehicle for
Listeria monocytogenes
. This outbreak was unanticipated because both the pH of apples (<4.0) and the water activity of the caramel coating (<0.80) are too low to support
Listeria
growth. In this study, Granny Smith apples were inoculated with approximately 4 log
10
CFU of
L. monocytogenes
(a cocktail of serotype 4b strains associated with the outbreak) on each apple's skin, stem, and calyx. Half of the apples had sticks inserted into the core, while the remaining apples were left intact. Apples were dipped into hot caramel and stored at either 7°C or 25°C for up to 11 or 28 days, respectively. Data revealed that apples with inserted sticks supported significantly more
L. monocytogenes
growth than apples without sticks under both storage conditions. Within 3 days at 25°C,
L. monocytogenes
populations increased >3 log
10
in apples with sticks, whereas only a 1-log
10
increase was observed even after 1 week for caramel-coated apples without sticks. When stored at 7°C, apples with sticks exhibited an approximately 1.5-log
10
increase in
L. monocytogenes
levels at 28 days, whereas no growth was observed in apples without sticks. We infer that insertion of a stick into the apple accelerates the transfer of juice from the interior of the apple to its surface, creating a microenvironment at the apple-caramel interface where
L. monocytogenes
can rapidly grow to levels sufficient to cause disease when stored at room temperature.
IMPORTANCE
Neither caramel nor apples are a food where the pathogenic bacterium
Listeria monocytogenes
should grow, as caramel does not contain enough free water and apples are too acidic. Caramel-coated apples, however, were recently linked to a deadly outbreak of listeriosis. We hypothesized that inserting a stick into the apple releases juice to the interface between the apple and caramel, providing a more hospitable environment than either component alone. To test this hypothesis, apples were inoculated with
L. monocytogenes
prior to caramel dipping. Some apples had sticks inserted into them before dipping, while others did not. No growth of
L. monocytogenes
occurred on refrigerated caramel apples without sticks, whereas slow growth was observed on refrigerated caramel apples with sticks. In contrast, significant pathogen growth was observed within 3 days at room temperature on caramel apples with sticks inserted. Food producers should consider interfaces between components within foods as potential niches for pathogen growth.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Reference21 articles.
1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2015. Multistate outbreak of listeriosis linked to commercially produced prepackaged caramel apples made from Bidart Bros. apples. http://www.cdc.gov/listeria/outbreaks/caramel-apples-12-14/. Accessed 9 March 2015.
2. U.S. FDA. 2015. FDA investigated Listeria monocytogenes illnesses linked to caramel apples. http://www.fda.gov/Food/RecallsOutbreaksEmergencies/Outbreaks/ucm427573.htm. Accessed 9 June 2015.
3. Chemical compositional characterization of some apple cultivars
4. Moisture and Shelf Life in Sugar Confections
5. Ryser ET, Buchanan RL. 2013. Listeria monocytogenes. In Doyle MP, Buchanan RL (ed), Food microbiology: fundamentals and frontiers. ASM Press, Washington, DC.