Title of article
Tenderness and collagen composition of beef semitendinosus roasts cooked by conventional convective cooking and modeled, multi-stage, convective cooking
Author/Authors
Powell، نويسنده , , T.H and Dikeman، نويسنده , , M.E and Hunt، نويسنده , , M.C، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages
5
From page
421
To page
425
Abstract
Beef semitendinosus roasts were cooked in a forced-air convection oven using conventional or modeled, multi-stage cooking. Conventional cooking was defined as cooking at 163°C to a core endpoint of 65°C. The model method was developed using a finite difference heat and mass transfer model optimized for a three-stage cooking process that included preheating, holding, and finishing. Model cooking resulted in lower (P<0.05) Warner–Bratlzer peak shear force values than conventional cooking (3.3 vs 4.7 kg). Collagen total unaltered fraction was lower (44 vs 55%, P=0.05) and enzyme labile fraction was higher (56 vs 45%, P<0.05) in the model-cooked samples than in conventionally cooked samples. The three-stage cooking process results in a more tender product without adversely affecting product yield.
Keywords
Collagen , Tenderness , Beef roasts , cooking methods
Journal title
Meat Science
Serial Year
2000
Journal title
Meat Science
Record number
1446533
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