Affiliation:
1. Department of Animal Production & Food Science, Unit of Hygiene, Inspection, Control, and Food Microbiology, Veterinary Faculty, University of Zaragoza, Miguel Servet, 177, #50013 Zaragoza, Spain
Abstract
Samples of Spanish dry-cured hams were analyzed using several physico-chemical parameters (moisture content, chlorides, water activity, nitrate, nitrite, total volatile basic nitrogen [TVBN], pH, and oxidation-reduction potential [Eh]). The samples (n = 76) were taken from three basic types of dry-cured hams produced in Spain: slow-cured hams from white pigs (n = 39), fast-cured hams from white pigs (n = 15), and hams from black-skinned Iberian pigs (n = 22). Overall, 56 samples (73.7%) showed the “bone taint” condition, and the remaining 20 hams (26.3%) were normal, and therefore considered as a control group. The objective of this research was to establish the possible circumstances that determine the alteration by means of the differences found in the values of the analyzed measurements in both groups of samples (altered versus normal ones). The hams with “bone taint” were, in general terms, those with a higher TVBN content, a greater pH, and a lower Eh, attributable to an anomalous development of the proteolytic phenomena. The conjunction of a lower concentration of chlorides, greater moisture content, and a higher aw in the affected hams may have created the conditions favorable for tissue enzyme and/or microbial activity.
Publisher
International Association for Food Protection
Subject
Microbiology,Food Science