The Influence of Cooking Methods and Muscle on Beef Aroma Profile and Consumer Satisfaction: Insights from Volatile Compound Analysis

Author:

Wojtasik-Kalinowska Iwona1,Farmer Linda J.2,Hagan Terence D. J.2,Gordon Alan W.2ORCID,Polkinghorne Rod3,Pogorzelski Grzegorz4,Wierzbicka Agnieszka1,Poltorak Andrzej1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Technique and Food Development, Faculty of Human Nutrition and Consumer Sciences, University of Life Sciences, 159 c Nowoursynowska, 02-776 Warsaw, Poland

2. Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute, Newforge Lane, Belfast BT9 5PX, UK

3. Birkenwood Pty Ltd., 461 Timor Rd., Murrurundi, NSW 2338, Australia

4. Institute of Genetics and Animal Biotechnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences, Jastrzebiec, 05-552 Magdalenka, Poland

Abstract

The objective of this study is to determine the effect of two distinct cooking techniques, namely roasting and stewing, on the formation of volatile compounds in various beef muscles (Semimembranosus, Biceps femoris, and Rectus femoris) and how this relates to consumer acceptance. The research employs the concept of volatile “marker” compounds to discern the influence of cooking techniques on the flavor profile of beef. Eighteen “marker compounds” were selected to represent a number of the mechanisms of formation and quantified in beef subjected to two different cooking methods. While no statistically significant differences were observed in consumer evaluations between the two cooking methods, notable disparities emerged in the consumer assessments of specific muscle cuts. Notably, the Rectus femoris muscle received the highest ratings (p < 0.05) among other evaluated muscles. The utilization of Solid-Phase Microextraction (SPME) and gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS) methods for the analysis of volatile “marker compounds” in beef proved effective in highlighting significant differences in flavor compound classes between cooking methods, and these differed between muscles. The main effect was of the cooking method with stewed beef aroma having approximately 39× more dimethyl trisulphide, 9× more dimethyl disulphide, 7× more pentanal, 3× more hexanal, and twice as much benzaldehyde and 2-methylthiophene. Dimethyldisulphide, dimethyltrisulphide, hexanal, and heptanal, therefore, emerged as characteristic volatile compounds associated with the stewing cooking technique, suggesting their potential as markers for lipid and other oxidation reactions. This work indicates that certain lipid oxidation compounds, Strecker aldehydes, and sulfur compounds can be markers for the undesirable and/or desirable flavors of cooked beef, but that this depends on the cooking method chosen. It shows that flavor differences may be understood through the analysis of volatile flavor compounds in association with palatability and other chemical measurements.

Funder

Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education with funds from the Department of Technique and Food Development, Warsaw University of Life Sciences

European Regional Development Fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

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