Title of article
Application of an ultrasonic assisted curing technique for improving the diffusion of sodium chloride in porcine meat Original Research Article
Author/Authors
I. Sir?، نويسنده , , Cs. Vén، نويسنده , , Cs. Balla، نويسنده , , Andrew E. G. Jonas، نويسنده , , I. Zeke، نويسنده , , L. Friedrich، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
10
From page
353
To page
362
Abstract
Pork loins (Longissimus dorsi) were immersed in sodium chloride brine (40 g L−1) and treated at 5 °C with one of the three following brining treatments: (1) static brining, (2) vacuum tumbling, or (3) ultrasonic brining at low-frequency (20 kHz) and low-intensity (2–4 W cm−2). The effect of ultrasonic and tumbling assisted curing technology on porcine tissue microstructure, protein denaturation, water-binding capacity (WBC), water-holding capacity (WHC), sodium chloride diffusion coefficient (D) and on meat textural profile (TPA) was investigated. Results showed that both ultrasonic treatment and tumbling caused favourable microstructural changes in meat tissue. Water-holding capacity and textural properties were improved by ultrasonic treatment compared to both tumbled and static brined samples. However, these positive effects were highly dependent on ultrasonic intensity. Higher intensities and/or longer treatment times caused denaturation of proteins. The constant diffusion coefficient model was able to describe precisely the NaCl diffusion kinetics during brining. Ultrasonic treatment significantly enhanced the diffusion of salt compared to samples brined under static conditions and diffusion coefficient exponentially increased with increased ultrasonic intensity.
Keywords
Ultrasound , Diffusion coefficient , Porcine meat , Tenderness , Tumbling , Curing
Journal title
Journal of Food Engineering
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Journal of Food Engineering
Record number
1168145
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