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Consumer perceptions of pork eating quality as affected by pork quality attributes and end-point cooked temperature
Authors:S.J. Moeller   R.K. Miller   K.K. Edwards   H.N. Zerby   K.E. Logan   T.L. Aldredge   C.A. Stahl   M. Boggess  J.M. Box-Steffensmeier
Affiliation:aDepartment of Animal Sciences, The Ohio State University, 122 Animal Science Building, 2029 Fyffe Court, Columbus, OH 43210, United States;bTexas A&M University, Department of Animal Science, 2471 TAMU, College Station, TX 77843-2471, United States;cFood Animal Consultation and Testing Services (FACTS), P.O. Box 333, Sheldon, IA 51201, United States;dNational Pork Board, P.O. Box 9114, Des Moines, IA 50306, United States;eThe Ohio State University, 2049S Derby, 154 N. Oval Mall, Columbus, OH 43210, United States
Abstract:The study evaluated the interactive and individual effects of fresh pork loin (n = 679) ultimate pH (pH), intramuscular fat (IMF), Minolta L* color (L*), Warner–Bratzler shear force (WBS), and four cooked temperatures (62.8 °C, 68.3 °C, 73.9 °C, and 79.4 °C) on consumer (n = 2280) perception of eating quality (n = 13,265 observations). Data were analyzed using ordered logistical regression. Predicted mean responses were consistently near or under five on the 1–8-point end-anchored scale, indicating a neutral perception of pork eating quality regardless of fresh quality or cooked temperature. Responses improved as IMF and pH increased and WBS decreased, whereas L* did not contribute significantly to variation in responses. Increasing IMF resulted in a very small incremental improvement in responses, but was of practical size only when comparing the least (1%) to the greatest (6%) levels. Loin pH and WBS were primary contributors to consumer perceptions, whereby an incremental increase in pH (0.20 unit) and decrease in WBS (4.9 N) resulted in a 4–5% reduction in the proportion of consumers rating pork as greater-or-equal, slanted6 (favorable) on the 8-point scale. No interactions between quality and temperature effects were observed. Increased cooked temperature was negatively (P < 0.05) associated with Overall-Like and Tenderness ratings, but the incremental effect was small. Juiciness-Like and Level responses decreased by 0.50 units as temperature increased across the range. Consumer responses favor pork with lower WBS, greater pH and IMF, and pork cooked to a lower temperature.
Keywords:Pork quality   Tenderness   Temperature   Consumer preference   Ultimate pH
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