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MEAT QUALITY ATTRIBUTES OF CHILLED VENISON AND BEEF
Authors:MM FAROUK  M BEGGAN  S HURST  A STUART  PM DOBBIE  AED BEKHIT
Affiliation:AgResearch Limited Ruakura MIRINZ Centre Private Bag 3123, Hamilton, New Zealand; Food Safety Authority of Ireland Dublin, Ireland; HortResearch Ruakura Research Centre Hamilton, New Zealand; Agriculture and Life Sciences Division Lincoln University Canterbury, New Zealand
Abstract:

ABSTRACT

Meat quality attributes of venison and beef “semimembranosus” muscle stored at ?1.5 C for 4 weeks were compared. Chilled venison had lower L*, a*, b*and chroma compared to beef. Percent expressible water (PEW), shear force and cook loss were lower in venison compared to beef. μ‐Calpain activities at pH 7.4 and 5.5 were higher and the activity of μ + m‐calpain at pH 5.5 (and not at pH 7.4) was lower in venison compared to beef. L*, a*, b*and chroma in meat from both species increased with chilled storage time (P < 0.01); the increase was higher in beef compared to venison. μ‐Calpain activities at pH 7.4 and 5.5 in venison increased in the first week of storage and then declined in the second while it decreased with time in beef at pH 7.4 and followed similar trend as venison at pH 5.5. Activities of μ + m‐calpain at pH 7.4 and 5.5 decreased with chilled storage time in both types of meat. Shear force decreased with storage time, raw meat PEW increased in the first week and cook loss increased for the first 2 weeks of storage and then declined thereafter in both meats. Within the parameters of this study, the table‐eating quality of venison improved and its color deteriorated faster in chilled storage compared to beef implying that the processing inputs required to maximize meat quality of beef may not be suitable for venison and vice versa.

PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS

The following are some of the practical applications of this research: (1) process variables for optimal quality of table beef and venison differ, processors should tailor their process specifically for each specie; (2) venison producers who supply distant markets should consider the rapid rate of tenderization of venison to avoid supplying products with poor texture resulting from over tenderization; (3) the practice of packaging meat under high oxygen environment to enhance color may affect the quality of venison more than other red meats because of the rapid rate of oxidation in venison relative to these meats; (4) the rapid deterioration in the color of venison underscored the need to come up with a way of convincing the consumer to accept the browner color of venison as an inherent characteristic of this meat in order to minimize any bias against the meat because of its color; and (5) the use of fluorogenic substrates for determining calpain activities if further validated in other studies can be used for the online prediction of tenderness early postmortem.
Keywords:
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