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Abstract
Although sensory and/or microbiological analyses are widely relied on when assigning
shelf-life of foods or trouble shooting problems with spoilage under storage, they
do have drawbacks. Delay in obtaining results is one of them. The expense of the expert
panels required to obtain meaningful sensory evaluations is another, while spoilage
is not always of microbial origin. Even when it is, there are an increasing number
of situations, including that of meats and fish packaged in modified atmospheres,
where the relationships between microbial growth and spoilage onset is poorly defined.
Chemical analysis has long been recognized as a means of circumventing at least some
of the drawbacks and its potential is reviewed below. From the data presented it can
be concluded that chemical characterization of spoilage processes is presently of
most value in trouble shooting i.e. establishing the causes of spoilage. Its value
in assigning total or remaining shelf-life requires more knowledge of the chemical
processes leading to reduced acceptability/spoilage and of their correlations with
sensory and microbiological changes.