The study aimed to evaluate the decontamination efficacy of clove oil on broiler Pectoralis major fillets natural spoilage-flora and Salmonella contamination compared to chlorine and a commercial triple-mixture of peroxyacetic acid (PAA). Furthermore, the intervention’s impact on breast fillet shelf-life and physicochemical quality was investigated. Thirty-six fillets (fillets n = 3 × storage-period n = 6 × replication n = 2) were dipped in one of four treatments: sterile water (control), chlorine (50 ppm), clove (1.5%) or PAA (225 ppm). For Salmonella-inoculated experiment, 18 fillets were dipped per treatment (fillet n = 3 × storage-period n = 6). Overall, the PAA retarded most spoilage microflora and Salmonella growth, particularly aerobic plate count, below the unacceptable spoilage level of 6 log CfU/g for 9 chilling-days. However, specific meat quality metrics, particularly oxidative stability, were negatively impacted by PAA. Clove exhibited a lower and/or similar, but delayed, antibacterial effect on spoilage-flora and Salmonella levels than PAA, along with an impressive antioxidant protective effect on fillets attributes, particularly lightness and appearance. Chlorine at the current recommended dose did not extend shelf-life beyond six days or reduce Salmonella growth, although it generated lower yellowness, higher redness, and tenderness scores than other treatments. Treatments did not prolong the fillets shelf-life beyond 6 cooling-days due to oxidizing properties of PAA, diminished chlorine concentration, and shorter contact time of clove. Cloves could therefore be sprayed in another step before final packaging to extend contact-time and boost antioxidant and antibacterial barriers. Lower doses and shorter exposure durations seem desirable and could contribute to minimize the PAA negative oxidative effect on meat quality parameters. |