Development and Application of Starter Cultures, 2nd Edition

A special issue of Fermentation (ISSN 2311-5637). This special issue belongs to the section "Fermentation for Food and Beverages".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 January 2025 | Viewed by 1205

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Agris Sardegna, Agenzia Regionale per la Ricerca in Agricoltura, Associated Member of the JRU MIRRI-IT, Loc. Bonassai, SS291 km 18.600, 07100 Sassari, Italy
Interests: food microbiology; fermented food; microbial biodiversity; microbial culture collections; lactic acid bacteria; starter cultures; fingerprint; antibiotic resistance
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Guest Editor
Agris Sardegna, Agenzia Regionale per la Ricerca in Agricoltura, Associated Member of the JRU MIRRI-IT, Loc. Bonassai, SS291 km 18.600, 07100 Sassari, Italy
Interests: food microbiology; fermented food; microbial biodiversity; microbial culture collections; lactic acid bacteria; starter cultures; fingerprint; antibiotic resistance
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

In recent decades, starter cultures have been developed to aid raw material processing with the aim of obtaining different types of fermented food products. In fact, properly developed selected starters represent a convenient solution to easily and safely carry out the fermentation when the concentration of the microbiota colonizing the production environment and the raw material itself turns out to be inadequate, or natural starter cultures are difficult to obtain and manage.  

Different purposes can be pursued when developing a starter culture: (a) selecting a low, defined number of species/strains, on the basis of their strong aptitude to fulfil the biochemical processes required by each production technology and for their suitability to be grown in the laboratory; or (b) trying to reproduce autochthonous biodiverse natural cultures where an indefinite number of species and strains, starter and nonstarter (but crucial during the whole fermentation and ripening of food), coexist in equilibrium. Both choices have pros and cons. On one hand, selected cultures, because of and despite their high technological efficiency, easily become the dominant microbiota of the product, causing a dramatic decrease in microbial biodiversity and the loss of peculiar sensory characteristics of fermented food. In fact, this kind of culture is widely applied, at high concentration, to industrial level productions that do not possess geographic niches and typicity.

On the contrary, natural microbial communities have a strain composition which is not reproducible in any place other than that of their origin, contributing to preserve microbial biodiversity and enriching products with peculiar sensory features that bind them to the territory. Indeed, autochthonous natural starter cultures usually characterize the most typical and high-quality agri-food products. However, their technological performance is not standardized and their use is not risk-free since, together with useful autochthonous microorganisms, even pathogen or spoilage ones could potentially be inoculated and allowed to contaminate the product.

The goal of this Special Issue is to host innovative or review papers facing the challenge of developing starter cultures or, at least, laying the foundation for them, which could be applicable on an artisanal, pilot or industrial scale, able to guarantee safety, quality constancy, and technological performance reproducibility, and preserve biodiversity and peculiar sensory characteristics usually linked to traditional products, while overcoming the problems associated with the daily propagation of natural cultures. Furthermore, papers dealing with whether and how fermented product consumption could affect human gastro-intestinal tract microbiota, and eventually the health of the consumers, would be welcome.

Dr. Roberta Comunian
Dr. Luigi Chessa
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • starter cultures
  • fermented food
  • microbial biodiversity
  • metagenomics
  • traditional foods
  • food safety
  • antibiotic resistance
  • microbial culture collections
  • gut microbiota
  • probiotics

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Review

18 pages, 766 KiB  
Review
Starter Cultures for the Production of Fermented Table Olives: Current Status and Future Perspectives
by Marilisa Giavalisco, Emanuela Lavanga, Annamaria Ricciardi and Teresa Zotta
Fermentation 2024, 10(7), 351; https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation10070351 - 12 Jul 2024
Viewed by 892
Abstract
Table olives are widely produced and consumed in the Mediterranean area. The production of table olives is mainly based on spontaneous fermentations, which may have several drawbacks (e.g., the development of undesirable microorganisms; organoleptic defects) compared to fermentative processes driven by starter cultures [...] Read more.
Table olives are widely produced and consumed in the Mediterranean area. The production of table olives is mainly based on spontaneous fermentations, which may have several drawbacks (e.g., the development of undesirable microorganisms; organoleptic defects) compared to fermentative processes driven by starter cultures (typically lactic acid bacteria, yeasts, or their combinations). Studies on the effect of starter cultures have been mainly focused on some technological traits (e.g., acidifying capability, the degradation of phenolic compounds, metabolite production) and, to a lesser extent, on the dynamics of olive microbiota during fermentation. Recently, the application of Amplicon Targeted—High-Throughput Sequencing (AT–HTS) has enabled improvement of the knowledge on the composition and evolution of microbial communities during fermentations, including the role of starter cultures. The AT–HTS approaches used so far, however, have several constraints (e.g., poor investigation of mycobiota and metabolically active microorganisms) that do not allow a full understanding of the complex microbial interactions occurring in fermented olives. The aim of this review is to provide insights into the role of starter cultures in fermented olives and highlight the need to apply, as for other fermented foods, integrated “omics” approaches to predict and exploit their metabolic potential to improve the final properties of products. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Development and Application of Starter Cultures, 2nd Edition)
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