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The electrical stimulation of beef carcasses
Authors:James R. Bendall  Charles C. Ketteridge  Alan R. George
Abstract:
Beef carcasses were stimulated shortly after slaughter at varying voltage, pulse frequency and duration, with the aim of accelerating the fall of pH, destruction of ATP and onset of rigor in the muscles, so that the meat could be chilled rapidly after slaughter without danger of cold-shortening. Optimal effects were produced at 700 V, 25 Hz for 2 min, to give a total of 3000 pulses. In undressed carcasses stimulation induced a pH fall to 6.0 within 1 h of slaughter and to 5.7 within 2.5 h in the major muscles of the forelimb, back and thigh, representing a gain of more than 8 h over the time required in unstimulated carcasses hanging at 16°C. Similar results were obtained with dressed carcasses and sides, after allowing for the 50 min or so lost in dressing. The apparently high rate of pH fall from 6.3 to 5.7 after stimulation had ceased, compared with that over the same pH range in unstimulated carcasses, can be attributed mainly to the different muscle temperatures in the two cases (38 and 26°C respectively, in four major muscles). The muscles of stimulated carcasses showed no deleterious effects of stimulation. The observed drip loss from the hindlimb jointed 6 days after slaughter was not significantly greater than that from unstimulated carcasses.
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