The viability of probiotics in non-dairy food products during storage is required to meet content criteria for probiotic products. This study investigated whether non-dairy foods could be matrices for probiotics. Selected probiotic bacteria were coated on non-dairy foods under two storage conditions, and viabilities were assessed. The non-dairy foods were coated with 5–7 log cfu g ?1 of Lactobacillus acidophilus ATCC4356 T , Lactobacillus plantarum RC30, and Bifidobacterium longum ATCC15707 T . The coated non-dairy foods were stored at 20 °C and 20% relative humidity (RH) or 30 °C and 50% RH. Viability of probiotic bacteria was determined after 0, 2, and 4 weeks of storage. B. longum showed the highest survival at week 4 of 6.5–6.7 log cfu g ?1 on wheat bran and oat, compared with 3.7–3.9 log cfu g ?1 of L. acidophilus and 4.2–4.8 log cfu g ?1 of L. plantarum at 20 °C 20% RH. Under the storage conditions of 30 °C 50% RH, survival of 4.5 log cfu g ?1 of B. longum was also found on oat and peanut. This was two and four times higher than the population of L. acidophilus and L. plantarum , respectively. The results suggest that probiotics can survive on non-dairy foods under ambient storage conditions. However, the storage conditions, food matrices, and probiotic strains should be carefully chosen to maximize probiotic bacteria survival.
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