Nineteen bacteriological media were evaluated to assess their suitability to selectively enumerate Lactobacillus delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus, Streptococcus thermophilus, Lactobacillus casei, Lactobacillus rhamnosus, Lactobacillus acidophilus, bifidobacteria, and propionibacteria. Bacteriological media evaluated included Streptococcus thermophilus agar, pH modified MRS agar, MRS-vancomycine agar, MRS-bile agar, MRS-NaCl agar, MRS-lithium chloride agar, MRS-NNLP (nalidixic acid, neomycin sulfate, lithium chloride and paramomycine sulfate) agar, reinforced clostridial agar, sugar-based (such as maltose, galactose, sorbitol, manitol, esculin) media, sodium lactate agar, arabinose agar, raffinose agar, xylose agar, and L. casei agar. Incubations were carried out under aerobic and anaerobic conditions at 27, 30, 37, 43, and 45degreesC for 24, 72 h, and 7 to 9 d. S. thermophilus agar and aerobic incubation at 37degreesC for 24 h were suitable for S. thermophilus. L. delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus could be enumerated using MRS agar (pH 4.58 or pH 5.20) and under anaerobic incubation at 45degreesC for 72 h. MRS-vancomycine agar and anaerobic incubation at 43degreesC for 72 h were suitable to enumerate L. rhamnosus. MRS-vancomycine agar and anaerobic incubation at 37degreesC for 72 h were selective for L. casei. To estimate the counts of L. casei by subtraction method, counts of L. rhamnosus on MRS-vancomycine agar at 43degreesCfor 72 h under anaerobic incubation could be subtracted from total counts of L. casei and L. rhamnosus enumerated on MRS-vancomycine agar at 37degreesC for 72 h under anaerobic incubation. L. acidophilus could be enumerated using MRS-agar at 43degreesC for 72 h or Basal agar-maltose agar at 43degreesC for 72 h or BA-sorbitol agar at 37degreesC for 72 h, under anaerobic incubation. Bifidobacteria could be enumerated on MRS-NNLP agar under anaero bic incubation at 37degreesC for 72 h. Propionibacteria could be enumerated on sodium lactate agar under anaerobic incubation at 30degreesC for 7 to 9 d. A subtraction method was most suitable for counting propionibacteria in the presence of other lactic acid bacteria from a product. For this method, counts of lactic bacteria at d 3 on sodium lactate agar under anaerobic incubation at 30degreesC were subtracted from counts at d 7 of lactic bacteria and propionibacteria.