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Decreasing Variation in Cook Color of Ground Beef Patties Varying in Myoglobin and pH Using Acetic Acid and Hydrocolloid Solutions

The objective was to examine the use of acetic acid (AA) with xanthan gum
(XG) or konjac flour (KF) to reduce variation in cooked color of ground beef patties
varying in myoglobin and pH. Beef clods were selected from carcasses of young (<24
months, Y) and mature (>48 months, M) animals. Within each age category, high (>6.0,
H) and normal pH (5.3-5.7, N) clods were chosen. Ground beef was prepared from each
maturity/pH combination and treatments applied at 12% of the meat block: control
(mixed only), 0.5% AA, 0.25% XG/0.5% AA, or 0.125% KF/0.5% AA. Dry and moist
cooking was performed in a convection oven to internal temperatures: 65.6 degrees C, 71.1 degrees C,
and 76.7 degrees C. Patties were held at 76.7 degrees C for up to 240 min in dry and moist
environments. Internal (assessed at 0, 120, and 240 min of holding) and external
(assessed every 30 min, 0 to 240 min of holding) color evaluations (CIE L*a*b*, visual
doneness, and pink scores) were conducted. Three replications were performed. The
YN patties had the most done appearance internally and the highest denatured
myoglobin percentage. Generally, the YH and MN patties had responses between YN
and MH got most variables. The MH patties had the highest internal a* color space values, lowest degree of doneness scores and low percentage of denatured myoglobin.
The YN patties responded normally to the different internal temperatures achieved
during cooking. The YH, MN, and MH patties had increased doneness to 71.1 degrees C and
plateaued between 71.1 degrees C to 76.7 degrees C. Visual degree of doneness decreased during moist
holding and this was most evident in dry cook/moist held patties. Patties from MH meat
were not affected by the treatments as much as the other meat types. The inclusion of
AA, XG/AA, and KF/AA in patties made from YH and MN can effectively reduce
visible redness and increase myoglobin denaturation in comparison to the control YN
beef patties. These ingredients could be viable options to reduce the variation that pH or
myoglobin content imparts on ground beef patty cooked color, but as seen in the MH
meat, treatment additions were not effective for overcoming both pH and high
myoglobin content.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-12-7385
Date2009 December 1900
CreatorsAldredge, Teresa Lynn
ContributorsMiller, Rhonda K.
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Thesis, text
Formatapplication/pdf

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