Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5543262 | Meat Science | 2017 | 25 Pages |
Abstract
Eighty-four crossbred wether and ewe lambs were allocated to four finishing diets. The diets were: Lucerne pasture (n = 24), Annual ryegrass with sub clover pasture (n = 18), Standard commercial feedlot pellets (n = 24) and Annual ryegrass based pasture and commercial feedlot pellets (500 g/day/head) (n = 18). After 8 weeks of feeding the lambs were slaughtered and the m. longissimus (LL) and m. semimembranosus (SM) were vacuum packaged and held chilled for 5 (fresh) or 60 (long aged) days, after which samples of each were displayed for 4 days under simulated retail conditions. Irrespective of muscle type the long aged samples exhibited a rapid reduction in redness (a*-values) and R630/580 nm ratio values such that consumer acceptable thresholds for both traits were quickly exceeded providing limited shelf life. Long ageing also lead to high TBARS levels measured as MDA mg/kg muscle suggestive of a product likely to exhibit rancidity and off flavours from lipid oxidation.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Food Science
Authors
Eric N. Ponnampalam, Tim Plozza, Matthew G. Kerr, Nick Linden, Meredith Mitchell, Alaa El-Din A. Bekhit, Joe L. Jacobs, David L. Hopkins,