Unraveling microbial diversity and physicochemical hazard level in Thai traditional fermented shrimp paste (Kapi)
Thitikorn Mahidsanan, Pattama Srinamngoen, Priyada Sittisart

TL;DR
This study examines the safety and quality of Thai fermented shrimp paste (Kapi) by analyzing its microbial and chemical properties under different production conditions.
Contribution
The paper introduces a risk-based framework to improve Kapi safety through standardized salt concentration, hygiene practices, and starter cultures.
Findings
M1 had the highest safety with no pathogens, while M3 and M5 showed high microbial loads.
Histamine levels varied significantly, with M6 having the highest at 39.4 mg/kg.
Lentibacillus and Staphylococcus species were dominant, with potential to degrade histamine.
Abstract
Fermented shrimp paste (Kapi) is a culturally significant condiment valued for its flavor and nutritional value. However, inconsistent production practices may lead to microbial contamination and histamine accumulation, posing health risks. Understanding microbial diversity, salt-tolerant pathogens, and the effectiveness of hygienic controls is essential for improving product safety and quality consistency. This study assessed the microbial and physicochemical characteristics of seven Kapi produced under varying hygienic conditions: a certified commercial export product (M1), a traditionally fermented product using 25% (w/w) salt (M2), wet-market bulk products (M3, M4), and sealed community-enterprise products (M5, M6, M7). Microbiological hazards were characterized using Oxford Nanopore sequencing, and physicochemical analyses, including histamine content, were conducted. M1 exhibited…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolyamine Metabolism and Applications · Meat and Animal Product Quality · Probiotics and Fermented Foods
