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Effect of Injection and Frozen Storage on the Quality Attributes of Fully Cooked Bone-In Hams

This study determined the effects of sucrose and sorbitol as cryoprotectant (CR)
on the quality and sensory attributes of bone-in hams (N=90) injected (20% of weight)
with following brine treatments (BT): control (2% sucrose; CNT), 2% CR (1% sucrose,
1% sorbitol), 4% CR (2% sucrose, 2% sorbitol). Hams that were frozen and injected
with CNT after thawing (FZ I) were used as a negative control. After reaching the
designated ST all bone-in hams were thawed under refrigeration (4oC) and FZ I hams
were then injected with CNT (n=8). Hams were cooked to 70oC, chilled (7oC), sliced,
vacuum packaged and analyzed for lipid oxidation, color, protein solubility and purge at
0, 28, and 56 of refrigerated storage while sensory evaluation and shear force
determinations were conducted at 28 d.
Color, pH, and lipid oxidation values tended to remain similar or decrease as
frozen storage time increased. Water holding capacity (percent bound water) and
protein solubility increased as frozen storage increased. The 4% CR BT exhibited the
lowest shear force value (4.04 N/g) but was not statistically different than CNT or FZ I
on ham knuckle muscles. Trained sensory panelists found hammy and salty were the strongest flavor and basic taste attributes. The results of this study confirm that quality
attributes and protein functionality were maintained but not significantly improved by
injecting a brine solution with cryoprotectants prior to freezing.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-12-7273
Date2009 December 1900
CreatorsPhillips, Denise G.
ContributorsOsburn, Wesley
Source SetsTexas A and M University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Thesis, text
Formatapplication/pdf

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