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Use of Food Cultures in Meat Products: Traditional Use, Modern Applications and Legal Classification


Claudia Durmus holds a PhD in chemistry and is a state-certified food chemist. She is responsible for product development, product management and raw material management at NovaTaste Austria. The global company NovaTaste, with locations in Europe, Mexico, Canada and Thailand, offers its customers holistic solutions - with taste, function and optimal nutritional profiles. As a global leader in taste innovation, NovaTaste offers customised and sustainable solutions for food producers, butchers and foodservice players. It delivers reliable customised solutions in the form of all-in-one compounds or individual seasonings and functional components.
Why are food cultures used in food production? People have been fermenting food for thousands of years to preserve it and to make it more flavourful. For example, microorganisms turn milk into yoghurt or cheese, white cabbage into sauerkraut, barley into beer or meat into salami. This process used to happen spontaneously and unknowingly. Even today, the positive effects of fermentation, which gives food a longer shelf life, aromatic flavour, appealing colour and pleasant texture, are still appreciated. However, today this process is controlled and takes place with selected microorganisms, the food cultures. Nowadays, these cultures are used for more than just their original purpose: they are also used specifically to protect against spoilage organisms and pathogenic, i.e. disease-causing, microorganisms, thereby increasing food safety. As scientists and researchers are now able to control the fermentation process, they can reliably plan the colour and flavour development, control the conversion period, and maintain the product quality at the same high level in a standardised manner. We at NovaTaste mainly use in our food cultures are lactobacilli and pediococci from the lactic acid bacteria family as well as staphylococci. They all form competing flora that displace other existing bacteria and thus make foods longer lasting and safer. In addition, there are other specific modes of action of microorganisms.The current discussion initiated by the Netherlands to differentiate between “ingredients” and “additives” for cultures depending on the application area is not helpful, as the same culture would have to be declared differently depending on the application.