Publication | Closed Access
SODIUM LACTATE/SODIUM POLYPHOSPHATE EFFECTS ON OXIDATION IN PRECOOKED FROZEN PORK PATTIES
14
Citations
21
References
1999
Year
NutritionFood AnalysisFood PreservationHue AngleMeat QualityFood ChemistrySodium LactatePublic HealthFood TechnologyHealth SciencesAnimal NutritionFood QualityFood PreservativesFood SafetyMeat PackagingSl ContentFood ProcessingFood TextureMeat Science
ABSTRACT The objective of this study was to evaluate sodium lactate (SL; 0, 1, 2 or 3%) and sodium polyphosphate (SP; 0, 0.1, 0.2 or 0.3%) effects on lipid oxidation and color characteristics of precooked pork patties during frozen storage. Ground pork was mixed with SL and/or SP, stuffed, frozen, sliced and cooked from the frozen state, packaged and held frozen for 14 weeks. Samples containing SP had lower TBARS, regardless of SL content. SL decreased pH, a* and b* values and red color (R630–R580). L* value, hue angle, pork flavor, saltiness, and juiciness increased as SL increased. A moderate correlation occurred between SL and TBARS. SP decreased hue angle, cook loss, and rancid flavor and increased pH, b* value, pork flavor, saltiness, and juiciness. Storage time decreased a* value, red color and juiciness, while saltiness, alkalinity, and rancid flavor scores increased. Based on both physical and sensory characteristics, optimum combinations appear to be 3% SL and 0.2–0.3% SP.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1