INVESTIGADORES
ZARITZKY Noemi Elisabet
artículos
Título:
Mathematical modeling of the heat transfer process and protein denaturation during the thermal treatment of Patagonian marine crabs
Autor/es:
JIMENA B DIMA, PEDRO J. BARÓN, NOEMI E. ZARITZKY.
Revista:
JOURNAL OF FOOD ENGINEERING
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2012 vol. 113 p. 623 - 634
ISSN:
0260-8774
Resumen:
Southern Ocean swimming crab Ovalipes trimaculatus and the Patagonian stone crab Platyxanthus patagonicus are fishing resources with commercial value. Thermal treatment of crabs is necessary to denature muscle proteins, facilitating meat detachment from the crab shell (picking procedure). The proximal composition,protein patterns of crab muscle, thermophysical properties and heat transfer coefficients were determined. Heat transfer during thermal processing of body (i.e., cephalothorax) and claws of both crab species was simulated using a finite element computational code; the simulations were experimentally validated.Color changes in crab muscle during the heating process were measured. Thermal denaturation kinetics of myofibrillar proteins was determined using Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) in small samples previously heated in water under controlled conditions. DSC thermograms of raw crab muscle showed two peaks at 49.0 ± 0.4 and 77.5 ± 0.6 C corresponding to myosin and actin respectively. Activation energies for the denaturation of myosin (145.70 kJ/mol) and actin (156.42 kJ/mol) were calculated from Arrhenius equation. The degree of denaturation achieved by the myofibrillar proteins at the coldest point of the muscle in body and claws during the heating process was established by considering the protein denaturation kinetics determined by DSC, the activation energies and the heat penetration curves. Adequate conditions for the detachment of meat from the crab exoskeleton were established. The obtained results may help in determining the optimal heating times during the industrialization of these crustaceans.