Sensory and meat quality traits of pork in relation to post-slaughter treatment and RN genotype.

Meat Sci

Department of Food Engineering, Lund University, PO Box 124, SE-221 00 Lund, Sweden.

Published: January 2004

The effects on eating quality and meat quality of two different forms of post-slaughter treatment, performed in an abattoir, were studied in carriers and non-carriers of the RN(-) allele. Carcasses were subjected to rapid and slow chilling, and pelvic and Achilles suspension in a factorial experimental design. A temperature of 10 °C was achieved in the centre of M. longissimus dorsi (LD) within 3.5 h in rapidly chilled carcasses and within 8 h in slowly chilled carcasses. In deep M. semimembranosus (SM) a temperature of 10 °C was achieved within 11.5 h in rapidly chilled carcasses and within 14 h in slowly chilled carcasses. LD from slowly chilled RN(-) carriers suspended by the pelvis exhibited the greatest tenderness, while LD from rapidly chilled non-carriers suspended from the Achilles tendon exhibited the lowest tenderness. Pelvic suspension or slow chilling of non-carriers produced the same improvement in tenderness, and when combined the tenderness increased further. However, the tenderness of the RN(-) carriers was already high, and no significant improvement was seen following any of the studied post-slaughter treatments. Pelvic suspension prevented shortening of muscle fibres, as seen by longer sarcomeres in LD from pelvic-suspended sides. However, longer sarcomeres were associated with greater tenderness only in LD from non-carriers of the RN(-) allele. The presence of the RN(-) allele and a slow chilling regime increased the rate of pH decline in LD. Achilles suspension also increased the rate of pH fall in SM, in addition to the RN(-) allele and slow chilling. The overall tenderness of LD was mainly related to the course of pH decline during rigor; lower pH values between 3 and 7 h post-mortem contributing to greater tenderness. The myofibrillar length was predominantly related to RN genotype and was shorter in RN(-) carriers than in non-carriers. The RN(-) allele and slow chilling contributed to higher evaporation losses and RN(-) carriers exhibited increased frequency of PSE meat in the ham muscles. The use of pelvic suspension appears advantageous over slower chilling, since it improved tenderness without any negative influence on drip loss, evaporation or cooking loss.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0309-1740(03)00067-6DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rn- allele
20
slow chilling
20
chilled carcasses
16
rn- carriers
16
non-carriers rn-
12
rapidly chilled
12
carcasses slowly
12
slowly chilled
12
pelvic suspension
12
allele slow
12

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!