Author:
Perry D.,Thompson J. M.,Hwang I. H.,Butchers A.,Egan A. F.
Abstract
The relationship between objective measurements (shear force, compression,
drip loss, cooking loss) and sensory evaluation of tenderness and juiciness of
samples of M. longissimus thoracis et lumborum was
examined using data from 2 experiments which imposed different electrical
stimulation and aging treatments post mortem, with resultant differences in
sensory and objective measures of tenderness. The relationships were tested
first in separate models for each objective measurement, and then in multiple
regressions containing all measurements. These models were then repeated with
the inclusion of stimulation and aging treatments and their interactions with
each objective measurement. Shear force by itself was a useful predictor of
sensory tenderness score, with which it had a quadratic relationship.
Compression and cooking loss, when used by themselves, accounted for
substantially less variation in sensory tenderness scores than did shear
force, with larger residual standard deviations (r.s.d.). Drip loss had no
significant relationship with sensory tenderness scores. Inclusion of
post-slaughter treatment in the analyses increased the amount of variation in
sensory tenderness scores accounted for by only a small amount in the case of
shear force, with a substantial increase in the case of compression and
cooking loss. Use of all objective measurements in the 1 model had a similar
predictive ability (r2 , r.s.d.)
as the use of shear force plus treatment variables. Aging affected the sensory
tenderness scores given by taste panellists, in that they gave 14-day aged
meat higher tenderness scores (more tender) than they gave 1-day aged meat
with the same shear force, compression or cooking loss values. Electrical
stimulation did not affect the relationship between sensory tenderness scores
and shear force, but did affect that between sensory scores and compression.
The effect was similar to that seen for aged meat, with stimulated meat being
scored as more tender by a taste panel than non-stimulated meat, at the same
compression values. Post-slaughter treatment did not affect the slope of these
relationships. When all objective measurements were analysed together, aging
period affected the relationship between tenderness scores and objective
measures, with tenderness scores being lower in 1-day aged samples than 14-day
aged samples at the same combination of objective measures. There was only a
poor relationship between shear force, compression, drip loss, cooking loss
and sensory juiciness scores.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
56 articles.
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