INVESTIGADORES
VAUDAGNA Sergio Ramon
artículos
Título:
Conventional freezing plus high pressure low temperature treatment: Physical properties, microbial quality and storage stability of beef meat
Autor/es:
FERNÁNDEZ PEDRO P.; SANZ PEDRO D.; MOLINA-GARCÍA ANTONIO D.; OTERO LAURA; GUIGNON BÉRENGERE; VAUDAGNA SERGIO R.
Revista:
MEAT SCIENCE
Editorial:
Elsevier Ltd.
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Año: 2007 vol. 77 p. 616 - 625
ISSN:
0309-1740
Resumen:
Meat high-hydrostatic pressure treatment causes severe decolouration, preventing its commercialisation due to consumer rejection. Novel procedures involving product freezing plus low-temperature pressure processing are here investigated. Room temperature (20 °C) pressurisation (650 MPa/10 min) and air blast freezing (-30 °C) are compared to air blast freezing plus high pressure at subzero temperature (-35 °C) in terms of drip loss, expressible moisture, shear force, colour, microbial quality and storage stability of fresh and salt-added beef samples (Longissimus dorsi muscle). The latter treatment induced solid water transitions among ice phases. Fresh beef high pressure treatment (650 MPa/20 °C/10 min) increased significantly expressible moisture while it decreased in pressurized (650 MPa/-35 °C/10 min) frozen beef. Salt addition reduced high pressure-induced water loss. Treatments studied did not change fresh or salt-added samples shear force. Frozen beef pressurised at low temperature showed L, a and b values after thawing close to fresh samples. However, these samples in frozen state, presented chromatic parameters similar to unfrozen beef pressurised at room temperature. Apparently, freezing protects meat against pressure colour deterioration, fresh colour being recovered after thawing. High pressure processing (20 °C or -35 °C) was very effective reducing aerobic total (2 log10 cycles) and lactic acid bacteria counts (2.4 log10 cycles), in fresh and salt-added samples. Frozen + pressurised beef stored at -18 °C during 45 days recovered its original colour after thawing, similarly to just-treated samples while their counts remain below detection limits during storage.