Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2450043 | Meat Science | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Indoor-kept concentrate-fed light lambs (n = 54) were supplemented with 500 mg of dl-α-tocopheryl acetate/kg concentrate for 0, 10, 20 and 30 d before slaughtering at 22–24 kg BW. Simultaneously, 8 lambs with their dams were alfalfa-grazed and the lambs were slaughtered at the same weight. The age at slaughter and carcass characteristics were more affected by grazing than by supplementation with α-tocopherol. The grazing lambs had similar α-tocopherol levels to the lambs fed concentrate with dl-α-tocopheryl acetate for 10 days before slaughter. The length of the feeding period affected the evolution of the color, delaying the blooming and discoloration of the meat. Feeding lambs α-tocopherol enriched concentrate during the last 10 days of life or grazing them on alfalfa drastically diminished the lipid oxidation of the meat. Alfalfa grazing is a feasible alternative to increase light lamb meat shelf life without using additives.
► Finishing period length did not affect to carcass characteristics and muscle pH. ► A finishing period of 10 d achieved similar α-tocopherol content than grazing lambs. ► Alfalfa grazing delayed lipid oxidation and metmyoglobin formation. ► The finishing period of 10 d diminished significantly lipid and pigments oxidation.