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Which is the shear force that defines the lamb's sensory acceptance?

Authors :
Heloísa Valarine Battagin
Yana Jorge Polizer Rocha
Luciana Ruggeri Menezes Gotardo
Letícia Zanichelli de Oliveira
Letícia Aline Gonçalves
Aline Giampietro Ganeco
Susana Cardoso
Ricardo Targino Moreira
Judite Lapa Guimarães
Sarita Bonagurio Gallo
Marco Antonio Trindade
Source :
Brazilian Journal of Food Technology, Vol 28 (2025)
Publication Year :
2025
Publisher :
Instituto de Tecnologia de Alimentos (ITAL), 2025.

Abstract

Abstract The lamb meat tenderness acceptance threshold has been little studied and has never been evaluated for the Brazilian population. So, this study aimed to find the maximum acceptable shear force for Brazilian lamb meat consumers. Three muscles were previously tested and chosen Longissimus thoracis et lumborum (LTL), psoas major and semimembranosus muscles received different treatments in the post-slaughter period (Hot deboning followed by cooling on ice, Standard carcass cooling and Ageing), aiming to create samples with varying levels of tenderness, which were evaluated by acceptance tests and descriptive analysis of tenderness by a trained team. Sarcomere length, myofibril fragmentation index, proximate composition, weight loss and pH analyses were performed to observe the biochemical phenomena in each treatment's meats. Variations caused in samples by treatments were more significant than differences inherent to the different muscles. Pearson and Multiple Factor correlation analyses indicated positive correlations between sarcomere length, myofibril fragmentation index and the scores assigned in sensory tests by 140 panelists and a trained team. Both groups noted that the differences between the meats in terms of tenderness and the sarcomere length also influenced the perception of juiciness observed by the groups. The maximum shear force indicated as acceptable for lamb meat was 44.1 N. The results obtained are important to guide the lamb meat producer for certain practices in the post-slaughter moments, avoiding actions that lead to sarcomere shortening and encouraging the production of aged meats.

Details

Language :
English, Spanish; Castilian, Portuguese
ISSN :
19816723
Volume :
28
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Brazilian Journal of Food Technology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.38baeaa3055d4c349775b9add693d160
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1590/1981-6723.07224