Green mold

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oil99
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Green mold

Post by oil99 » Thu Jul 12, 2018 22:09

I've been reading more and more that green isn't necessarily trouble. Does this look sketchy?

Salami wasn't inoculated, this is just natural growth. No curing chamber, just a basement room with temps during drying of 60-65F and RH of 75-85%. Took just under a month and I overshot drying due to being away and ended up at 44% weight loss.

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oil99
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Post by oil99 » Thu Jul 12, 2018 22:11

Here is a sliced pick after removing casing. Smells good but I understand that may not matter.

Sorry I couldn't figure out how to attach it to the initial post.

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Butterbean
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Post by Butterbean » Fri Jul 13, 2018 03:57

In curing meat you are working with nature and in nature there are few absolutes but I believe in most cases as long as it is mold and not slime you are fine, may not be what you want, may not be aesthetically pleasing as white mold but I wouldn't have any problem eating it.
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Post by Saltedtyme30 » Fri Jul 13, 2018 03:59

oil99, hey man green mold can be ok but could you maybe put the recipe you used ? As long as you have the right amount of salt you should be fine. Did you test your ph in the beginning ? As long as your ph was below 5.3 and your salt percentages were good you should be good. I had pancetta I rolled and cured and it had some green mold toward the crease of the part when you rolled it I seen more green mold on whole muscle than salami.
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Post by oil99 » Fri Jul 13, 2018 16:56

Thanks guys.

There was no slime and no black or bright colored mold. I wiped down half the batch a few weeks back and let the ones in the picture go as I wanted to see what happened. The white mold started within the first week and went green about a week later. I assume my RH was a bit high to start. At one point the smell in the room was different. Not bad, just different. That passed and as I mentioned the sliced salami smells good.

The recipes are Salami Calabrese from here and a premixed Genoa Salami package. Salt levels are 2.8% for the Calabrese but not sure what the salt % is in the premixed. This is before cure was added.

I didn't have strips for testing PH when I started this batch. But did a 72hr ferment with Mondostart classic.

I had some case hardening in some of them due to over drying so the product is currently shrink wrapped and in the fridge to equalize. I will attempt to taste it in a few days and hopefully its good.
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Post by Saltedtyme30 » Sat Jul 14, 2018 01:24

oil99, if you look at my posts 4 years ago of all my salami problems a lot has to do with not wanting to buy the right equipment like an expensive ph tester. Tspx calls for 72 hours but my last batch of last week was at 5.1 in little over 48 hrs so it all depends. If I wOils have waited another day and change ph would`ve been almost 4.5ish which is very tangy. I just visited Craig deihl at his spot and learned some things he does. Check him out. I`m even about to drop more money on a better grinder so I can have a better mouth feel salami. Literally everything you do in this art makes a difference ite crazy. I don`t think you can master it.
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Post by redzed » Tue Jul 17, 2018 16:43

Hello oil99
Your question about green mould is a common one among those starting out in dry curing meats. The appearance of surface moulds (and yeasts) have little to do with the amount of salt, nitrite or pH of the salami, since the amounts we use don't affect the sausage mince. Most moulds will grow well in a high humid environment with temps between 10 and 20C. No one can definitively tell you whether your green mould is desirable or not without a microscopic test. And when you choose to rely on indigenous fungal flora to populate your salami you will have several species growing on it many that you can't see or identify with the eye. Commercial producers that don't use starter cultures have to identify the moulds growing on the salami so they know exactly what the house flora is. Most green mould that appear on meat are fine as they usually belong to the Penicillium genus, but are not used in commercial starter cultures because of their appearance. And remember, that there will be other strains growing on your salami some of which might be toxic and others that will be safe to consume, but will have off flavours.

That is why I am a proponent of using a fungal starter containing aggressive strains that will dominate the surface of the salami. Below is an excerpt from an article on moulds by Elettra Berni, Department of Microbiology, SSICA, Parma, Italy, published in Handbook of Fermented Meat and Poultry, Second Edition. Edited by Fidel Toldrá, 2015, p.151

Selected fungal starter cultures should be inoculated on sausages in
order to avoid possible development of undesirable species, and at
the same time to provide a desirable appearance as much as good
technological and sensory characteristics to the product. Nevertheless,
their poor competitiveness usually requires high average RH
values and a low rate of environmental contamination, together with
high inoculation levels on the sausages to be ripened. For this reason,
the use of selected starter cultures is still only partially a widespread
practice, and sausage inoculation with indigenous molds occurring
in the air of the ripening environment is still favorably considered.
Although most of the so-called "house flora" prove to supply
ripened products with good technological and sensory features, it
must be noted that most spontaneous fungal species subjected to
consecutives subcultures-as frequently happens in the ripening
rooms within subsequent productive cycles-prove to rapidly
degenerate or to change their morphological appearance and
adapt to environmental conditions. This is due to the fact that the
genome of the species belonging to the genus Penicillium subgenus
Penicillium isolated from sausages appears to be unstable and tends
to cause a rapid adaption of these species to the nutritional niches
available, in order to take advantage of them (Williams et al., 1985).
Consequently, when producers choose not to use starter cultures, it
is necessary to identify the fungal species occurring on the surface
of the ripened product, regardless of the good appearance and
high sensory quality of the final product. Besides, the control of
the growth of the selected species and their predominance over
undesirable molds should be periodically planned by routine
laboratory tests (isolation and identification of the species used in
the industrial process) in order to avoid the unexpected setting up
of contaminating fungal species of environmental origin that are
morphologically similar to the selected ones but have undesirable
effects on the final product.
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