Exam 3: Meat Palatability Flashcards

1
Q

What is a high quality meat-eating experience?

A
  • Juiciness
  • Tenderness
  • Flavor

As meat prices go up, expectations also go up

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2
Q

Why is tenderness important in high quality eating experiences?

A
  • Essential for consumer acceptance
  • Adds value

Usually the more tender a cut, the more expensive it is

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3
Q

What influences tenderness?

A
  • Contractile state of the muscle
  • Enzymatic protein degradation
  • Amount and type of connective tissue

At 24 hours post-mortem the muscle is at maximum toughness

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4
Q

What affects sarcomere shortening?

A

Temperature
* Chilling too quickly –> cold shortening
* Chilling to slowly –> maximum rigor

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5
Q

The higher calpain activity, the ___ tender meat is

A

More

  • Activated by calcium
  • Inhibited by calpastatin
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6
Q

How does the amount of desmin relate to tenderness?

A

The more desmin, the tougher the muscle is

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7
Q

What influences calpastatin levels?

A
  • Breed
  • Beta-agonists
  • Callipyge disease
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8
Q

What happens to connective tissue over time?

A

It degrades

Amount and type of connective tissue influences tenderness

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9
Q

Does marbling influence tenderness?

A

No, only 10% of variation in tenderness is explained by marbling

For “acceptable” tenderness, you need at least 2% marbling

  • Lubercates the mouth
  • Reduces density
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10
Q

How can we manage tenderness pre-harvest?

A

Genetics
* Breed influence
* Myostatin gene
* Callipyge gene
* Genetic markers: markers for calpain and calpastatin

Management
* Pre-harvest stress –> Influences rate of rigor
* Implants
* Beta-agonists
* Age at harvest: More connective tissue as the animal ages
* Feed quality –> marbling deposition

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11
Q

How can we manage tenderness post-harvest?

A

Manage contractile state
* Prevent/decrease sarcomere shortening: Electrical stimulation, Fat cover, Stretching

Changing muscle properties
* Aging
* Blade tenderization
* Needle injection
* Tumbling
* Marination
* Non-meat additive: Pineapple (Bromelin), Papya (Papain), calcium-based ingredients

Cooking
* Cooking method: Slow cooking (breaks down connective tissue)
* Degree of doness

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12
Q

Why is juciness important?

A
  • Juciness can cause unacceptable eating experiences
  • Juciness enhances other traits: Enhances flavor acceptability 3-fold

Least researched trait

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13
Q

What is the definition of juiciness?

A

A combination of perception and the force applied to the meat

Perception: What you see

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14
Q

What influences juiciness?

A
  • pH of muscle: Driver of initial juiciness
  • Level of intramuscular fat (marbling): Driver of sustained juiciness
  • Post-harvest impacts
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15
Q

What is the relationship of water holding capacity and pH?

A

Water holding capacity decreases as pH nears the isoelectric point (pH 5.1)

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16
Q

How does direct heat cooking affect juiciness?

A

It often dries out the product

17
Q

How does moisture-based cooking affect juiciness?

A

It increases juiciness (increases moisture content)

18
Q

What trait becomes most important when tenderness is within an acceptable range?

A

Flavor

19
Q

What is flavor?

A

Taste + Aroma
* Taste refers to the five basic receptors: Sweet, Sour, Salty, Bitter, Umami
* Aroma is the sensation perceived when volatile compounds are sniffed through the nose

Flavor: Perception of chemical compounds reacting with receptors in the

20
Q

T/F: Taste receptors have axons

A

False, taste receptor cells do not have axons

21
Q

What is the biggest driver of flavor?

A

The nose

22
Q

What is the difference between smell and taste?

A
  • For taste, food needs to be placed directly on your tongue
  • Smell,