Physical and Sensory Characteristics of Beef Packaged in Modified Gas Atmospheres.

J Food Prot

Meats and Muscle Biology Section, Department of Animal Science, Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843.

Published: March 1979

One hundred and ninety-six boneless beef roasts ( longissimus muscles) were vacuum packaged. Twenty-eight roasts remained vacuum packaged to serve as controls while the remaining packages were injected with one of six gas mixtures: (a) 100% O, (b) 20% CO + 80% N, (c) 50% CO + 50%O, (d) 20% CO + 80% O, (e) 25% CO + 25% O +50% N or(f) 51% CO + 30% O + 18% N + 1% CO. Five cuts from each packaging treatment were stored in a 1-3-C cooler for 7, 14, 21, 28 or 35 days and subsequently evaluated for relative percentages of various gases in the intact packages, off-odor, surface discoloration. overall appearance, metmyoglobin percentages and palatability. Packages initially injected with modified gas atmospheres containing O increased in relative percentages of CO with advancing storage times. Roasts stored in modified atmospheres initially containing high levels of O exhibited a greater incidence of off-odor, more surface discoloration, lower overall appearance ratings, shorter retail caselife and lower overall palatability ratings than vacuum-packaged roasts or roasts stored in an atmosphere initially containing 20% CO + 80% N.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.4315/0362-028X-42.3.233DOI Listing

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