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1.
Meat Sci ; 75(3): 443-50, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22063800

ABSTRACT

Pork forelegs were used for manufacturing fresh sausages, treated with different natural antioxidants (rosemary, ascorbic acid and black pepper), packaged in 80% O(2)+20% CO(2) atmosphere and displayed at 2±1°C under different lightings (darkness, standard fluorescent, low-UV colour-balanced lamp and standard fluorescent plus a UV-filter). Two packs for each treatment were opened every 4 days for subsequent analysis of colour CIE L(∗), a(∗), b(∗), TBARS, microbial psychrotrophic aerobes and sensory discolouration and off-odour. Lighting with standard fluorescent was highly deleterious for sausage display life, which fell from 12 to 8 days due mainly to early discolouration. Inserting a UV-filter extended display life to 12 days, while the use of a low-UV lamp was not effective in protecting from discolouration. Addition of rosemary plus ascorbic acid, in the absence of black pepper, retarded discolouration only in sausages illuminated with the UV-filter, reaching a display life of 16 days, equal to that of sausages maintained in the dark.

2.
J Agric Food Chem ; 54(13): 4674-80, 2006 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16787014

ABSTRACT

The effects of rosemary, in combination with ascorbic acid, red beet root, and sodium lactate, as well as their mixtures, on the inhibition of both lipid and pigment oxidation of fresh pork sausages packaged in a modified atmosphere were studied. Sausages (240) were packaged in a 80% O2 + 20% CO2 gas mixture and analyzed for CIE a, metmyoglobin, TBARS, psychrotrophic aerobes, and sensory discoloration and off-odor throughout 20 days of storage at 2 +/- 1 degrees C. The mixture of rosemary + ascorbic acid + sodium lactate + red beet root extract extended the shelf life of fresh pork sausages from 8 to 16 days. Results demonstrated that all of the components of the mixture contributed to obtaining the maximum delay in color and/or odor decay, due to a combined inhibitory action on both pigment and lipid oxidation, as well as on microbial growth.


Subject(s)
Ascorbic Acid/administration & dosage , Beta vulgaris , Food Packaging/methods , Meat Products/analysis , Rosmarinus , Sodium Lactate/administration & dosage , Animals , Colony Count, Microbial , Food Preservation/methods , Lipid Peroxidation , Meat Products/microbiology , Metmyoglobin/analysis , Plant Roots , Sensation , Swine , Time Factors
3.
Meat Sci ; 72(2): 252-60, 2006 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22061552

ABSTRACT

Carcasses of 399 malignant hyperthermia gene free pigs from crosses sired by three types of Duroc (Virgen de la Fuente, DU1; Diputación de Teruel, DU2; DanBred, DU3) were analyzed for carcass and meat quality. Carcass leanness and fat parameters were measured at the last rib and at the space between the 3rd and 4th last ribs counting from the last one. Weights, pH, electrical conductivity, colour and intramuscular fat were also measured. A sample of 133 legs per cross were processed by dry-curing. The ham portion including Biceps femoris, Semimembranosus and Semitendinosus muscles was evaluated for instrumental texture and colour, biochemical and sensory analyses and acceptability (trained panel and consumers). DU3 carcasses were well conformed but lean. DU1 carcasses had a lower conformation but higher marbling. DU2 carcasses were intermediate. Dry-cured hams from DU1-sired pigs had a higher overall acceptability, although fat content influenced a consumers group negatively. Leaner DU3 hams had the lowest acceptability.

4.
Meat Sci ; 73(1): 12-21, 2006 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22062049

ABSTRACT

The effect of storage on dry-cured ham quality was studied. Sixteen vacuum-packaged boneless dry-cured hams and sixteen vacuum-packaged dry-cured ham cuts were stored in darkness under refrigeration (4±2°C; 8 months) or freezing (-18±1°C; 24 months), respectively. Instrumental colour and texture, physico-chemical and biochemical parameters, sensory profile and consumer acceptability and purchase satisfaction were measured throughout storage. The overall quality of refrigerated boneless dry-cured hams and frozen dry-cured ham cuts showed only limited changes throughout long-term storage. Significant changes involved loss of odour and flavour, increased adhesiveness and modification of hardness, the Semimembranosus muscle became tender while Biceps femoris became harder, leading to a higher textural homogeneity. In agreement with those changes, the overall acceptability assessed by a trained panel decreased throughout storage, though this was significant regarding only frozen hams. However, consumer evaluation of acceptability, as well as satisfaction with hypothetical purchasing, did not vary significantly throughout storage.

5.
Meat Sci ; 73(3): 521-8, 2006 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22062492

ABSTRACT

Two panels of assessors from France and Spain assessed 41 dry-cured hams from diverse geographical origins, pig breedings and feedings. Univariate (Kolmogorov-Smirnov test and t-test) and multivariate (canonical correlation and principal component analysis) statistical procedures have been used to explain the agreement and disagreement between panels evaluating similar and dissimilar sensory attributes quantified with a 9-points structure scale. The results pointed out that there were basic agreements between panels, although some disagreements were detected in mould, acorn and crust attributes. The classification of Iberian and white dry-cured hams and the sensory attributes that characterise them are also displayed.

6.
Meat Sci ; 73(4): 581-9, 2006 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22062556

ABSTRACT

Dry-cured ham cuts and slices were stored at 4±2°C for 8 months under vacuum and modified atmosphere (20% CO(2)+80% N(2)), respectively. Instrumental colour and texture, pH, non-protein nitrogen, total volatile basic nitrogen, acidity, lipid oxidation, sensory profile and consumer acceptability and purchase satisfaction were measured throughout storage. The overall quality of vacuum-packaged dry-cured ham cuts showed limited changes. Significant changes of sensory attributes involved only loss of flavour. The overall acceptability assessed by both trained and consumer panels did not decrease significantly throughout storage and the willingness to purchase remained above 50%. Conversely, modified-atmosphere-packaged ham slices had intense and extensive changes affecting sensory quality, particularly in visual appearance, flavour loss, off-flavour formation, saltiness and rancidity. Some of these changes were related to oxidation caused by low pH due to the presence of carbon dioxide in the protective atmosphere. Acceptability was significantly lower from the 4th month of storage and willingness to purchase fell below 50% at the same time.

7.
Meat Sci ; 71(3): 563-70, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22060934

ABSTRACT

This paper reports the effects of different concentrations of carbon dioxide and the presence of low levels of carbon monoxide on quality attributes throughout storage of fresh pork sausages. Four pork forelegs (initial pH 5.5-5.7) were used to prepare a total of 120 fresh sausages, which were packaged in different atmospheres containing (%O(2)/%CO(2)/%N(2)): 0/20/80; 0/60/40; 40/20/40; 40/60/0; 80/20/0; and 0.3% CO/30% CO(2)/rest argon. The packs were stored for 20 days at 2±1 °C in the dark. Three packs for each atmosphere were opened every 4 days for subsequent analysis of pH, colour CIE L*, a*, b*, TBARS formation, microbial psychotrophic aerobes and sensory discolouration and off-odour. Results showed that increasing concentrations of carbon dioxide promoted oxidation of both myoglobin and lipids, most probably due to its effect of lowering pH. Therefore, preservation of colour and odour of fresh pork sausages packaged in modified atmosphere was better achieved using atmospheres containing low CO(2) concentrations (20%) rather than high (60%). However, their shelf-life depended also on the concentration of O(2); 20% CO(2) with high O(2) (80%) enhanced the red colour, but shortened shelf-life, while 20% CO(2) in the absence of O(2) extended freshness to 16 days. The atmosphere containing 0.3% CO, together with 30% CO(2), maintained the red colour for 20 days, but failed to keep fresh odour longer than 16 days.

8.
Meat Sci ; 69(4): 789-95, 2005 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22063158

ABSTRACT

The evolution of biochemical, instrumental colour and texture, sensory parameters and consumer acceptability of 12-month dry-cured hams maintained up to 26 months under "bodega" conditions (18°C, 75% relative humidity) was assessed, in order to investigate the influence of extended ripening on their sensory characteristics and acceptability. Results demonstrated that ham acceptability showed no significant differences (p>0.05) from 12 to 22 months, while it decreased significantly (p<0.05) until 26 months. Principal component analysis of all data brought about a comprehensive explanation of the biochemical, instrumental and sensory parameters involved in the acceptability decrease. In fact, high pastiness and adhesiveness values, as measured by both sensory and instrumental methods, appeared to be most related to decreasing acceptability. Those attributes were the result of an excessive proteolysis, as revealed by biochemical maturation indices.

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