| NaCl. | KNO₃. | ||
| Average for 4 sour hams (entire ham) | per cent. | 3.84 | 0.143 |
| Average for 4 sound hams (entire ham) | do | 3.93 | .131 |
These figures show practically no difference between the sour and the sound hams as regards the sodium chlorid and potassium nitrate content of the entire ham.
If, now, we compare the bone slices—and these afford really a better basis for comparison, as in sour-body hams the souring is always more pronounced around the bone—we have the following figures:
| NaCl. | KNO₃. | ||
| Average for 4 sour hams (bone slice) | per cent. | 4.48 | 0.155 |
| Average for 4 sound hams (bone slice) | do | 4.52 | 0.129 |
Here, again, we find no essential difference between the sour and the sound hams, and we must conclude from these analyses that souring does not depend upon or result from a lack of penetration of the pickling fluids.
It seems probable that in mild-cure hams, which are pumped in the shank only, the souring begins in the upper portion of the shank and extends upward along the bone into the body of the ham, and that it takes place before the pickling fluid has penetrated to the interior of the ham. When the pickling fluid reaches the interior of the ham it tends to inhibit the souring, which, as will be shown later, is due to the development of bacteria within the bodies of the hams. The growth of the bacteria, however, within the bodies of the hams and the histological changes in the muscle fibers do not seem to interfere with the penetration of the pickling fluids.
BACTERIOLOGICAL EXAMINATION OF SOUR AND SOUND HAMS.
In all of the sour hams which were examined bacteriologically a large anaerobic bacillus was found to be constantly present. From several of the hams this bacillus was obtained in pure culture; that is, it was the only organism present in cultures made from the sour meat and from the bone marrow of the femur. Such cultures, when held at room temperature, gave, at three days, a sour-meat odor exactly resembling that obtained from sour hams.
In many of the sour hams other bacteria were found in association with the anaerobic bacillus noted above. These other bacteria, however, were not constant, being sometimes present and sometimes absent. Among the other bacteria noted in the sour hams, the following forms occurred most frequently:
1. A nonmotile, gram-positive bacillus, measuring from 1.5 to 4 microns in length by 0.5 micron in breadth, sometimes in chains and filaments.