Control of meat shelf-life includes the time that it remains in the exhibitor of sale (such as the supermarket) until its rejection for the consumer, or withdrawal due to expiry date. Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) is one of the most promising techniques for large-scale meat quality control. This study investigated the potential of on-site NIRS portable instrumentationbased models to predict three microbiological parameters to establish if pork meat is acceptable or not for consumption (aerobic Mesophilous microorganisms, Enterobacteriaceae, and lactic acid bacteria) and pH to quality control food preservation and shelf-life extension on intact slices of pork meat packaged under two different modified atmospheres. NIR calibrations were developed by using an on-site Phazir instrument (Polychromix, Wilmington, MA, USA) in the range 1,600-2,400 nm. A total of 252 samples of pork meat slices were directly scanned twice in reflectance mode on trays, once before and another one after removing the film cover at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 12, and 15 days of storage. Results showed that spectra of meat acceptable or not for consumption have marked differences around 1,660 nm. NIRS quantitative prediction models showed r 2 values between 0.19 and 0.65 for the microbiological parameters assayed. The developed NIRS methodology makes possible on-site prediction of microbiological status of pork meat with a standard error of cross-validation around 1 log cfu/g. Results have shown that modified atmosphere packaging has no influence on calibration statistics.
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