Effect of Previous Frozen Storage and Coating Medium on the Essential Macroelement and Trace Element Content of Canned Mackerel

Author:

Prego Ricardo1ORCID,Cobelo-García Antonio1,Martínez Beatriz2ORCID,Aubourg Santiago P.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Oceanography, Marine Research Institute (CSIC), 36208 Vigo, Spain

2. Department of Food Technologies, CIFP Coroso, Avenida da Coruña, 174, 15960 Ribeira, Spain

3. Department of Food Technology, Marine Research Institute (CSIC), c/Eduardo Cabello, 6, 36208 Vigo, Spain

Abstract

The effect of previous frozen storage (−18 °C for 6 months) and different coating media (aqueous: water and brine; oily: sunflower, refined olive, and extra-virgin olive oils) on the essential macroelement and trace element content of canned Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus) was studied. Previous frozen storage led to an increased (p < 0.05) content of canned samples of K (oil-coated samples) and Ca (all coating conditions) and to a decreased (p < 0.05) content of P (aqueous-coating samples) and S (water- and oil-coated samples). For trace elements, a content increase (p < 0.05) in Cu and Se (brine-canned samples) and Mn (water- and refined-olive-oil-coated samples) was detected in canned fish muscle with frozen storage. Concerning the coating effect, aqueous-coating samples showed lower (p < 0.05) Mg, P, S, K, and Ca contents than their corresponding oil-coated samples. For trace elements, lower average contents were found for Co, Cu, Mn, Se, and Fe in aqueous-coating fish muscle when compared to their counterparts coated in oily media. Content changes in the different elements in canned fish muscle are discussed based on interactions with other tissue constituents and modifications that such constituents undergo during processing (i.e., protein denaturation, liquor losses from the muscle, lipid changes).

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Health Professions (miscellaneous),Health (social science),Microbiology,Food Science

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