1. Application of tension to prerigor goat carcasses to improve cooked meat tenderness.
- Author
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Basinger KL, Shanks BC, Apple JK, Caldwell JD, Yancey JWS, Backes EA, Wilbers LS, Johnson TM, and Bax AL
- Subjects
- Animals, Cooking, Food Quality, Goats, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Sarcomeres, Shear Strength, Food Handling methods, Red Meat analysis, Stress, Mechanical
- Abstract
In two separate experiments, carcasses of intact Kiko × Boer male kids were assigned randomly to tension treatments applied 30 min postmortem: 1) suspended by the Achilles tendon (AT); 2) suspended from the pelvic bone with front and hind legs tied together (TS); or 3) suspended by the Achilles tendon, and the fore- and hindsaddle were separated at the 12th/13th thoracic intervertebral disk, external fat, accessory muscles and epimysium surrounding the longissimus muscle (LM) were cut (TC), and a 2.3-kg weight attached to the neck (TC + W). Warner-Bratzler shear force values for the LM were reduced (P < 0.05) 24.4 to 35.9 N in TS carcasses compared to AT carcasses, and WBSF values of SM from TS carcasses were 25.0 and 20.3 N less (P < 0.05) than those for AT and TC + W carcasses, respectively. Results indicated that cooked goat meat tenderness, particularly the LM and SM, may be improved greatly by suspending goat carcasses by the pelvic bone., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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