Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10143176 | Meat Science | 2019 | 40 Pages |
Abstract
Influences of multiple freeze-thaw (F-T) cycles on water status and distribution, microstructure and physicochemical properties of beef were investigated. Low-field nuclear magnetic resonance (LF-NMR) relaxation showed three water components were assigned to bound, immobilized and free water in beef matrix. With the increase of F-Tâ¯cycles, the relaxation time and peak area of immobilized water decreased significantly (Pâ¯<â¯0.05), which suggested the freedom and population of immobilized water decreased. T1 and T2 magnetic resonance images displayed a continuous decrease of water intensity in beef during multiple F-Tâ¯cycles. The cryo-scanning electron microscopy results revealed repeated F-Tâ¯cycles resulted in more and more large holes in the beef muscle fiber. The repeated F-Tâ¯cycles also led to decrease of pH value, WHC, L* and a* values, hardness, springiness, cohesiveness and resilience, and the increase of thawing loss, cooking loss, b* and TBARS value. Partial least-squares regression models stated the potential of LF-NMR to predict the quality of beef as a non-destructive method.
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Authors
Shasha Cheng, Xiaohui Wang, Ranran Li, Huimin Yang, Huihui Wang, Haitao Wang, Mingqian Tan,