Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2449918 Meat Science 2014 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Dried citrus pulp increased the phenolic compounds content of a concentrate diet.•Concentrate-based diets containing citrus pulp reduced lipid oxidation in lamb meat.•Meat colour was stable over storage and was slightly affected by the diet.

This study investigated the effect of replacing cereal concentrates with high levels of dried citrus pulp in the diet on lamb meat oxidative stability. Over 56 days, lambs were fed a barley-based concentrate (Control) or concentrates in which 24% and 35% dried citrus pulp were included to partially replace barley (Citrus 24% and Citrus 35%, respectively). Meat was aged under vacuum for 4 days and subsequently stored aerobically at 4 °C. The Control diet increased the redness, yellowness and saturation of meat after blooming (P < 0.01). Regardless of the level of supplementation, dietary dried citrus pulp strongly reduced meat lipid oxidation over 6 days of aerobic storage (P < 0.001), while colour parameters did not change noticeably over storage and their variation rate was not affected by the diet. In conclusion, replacing cereals with dried citrus pulp in concentrate-based diets might represent a feasible strategy to naturally improve meat oxidative stability and to promote the exploitation of this by-product.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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