scholarly journals Relationships between DNAJA1 Expression and Beef Tenderness: Effects of Electrical Stimulation and Post-mortem Aging in two Muscles

2015 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 815-820 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmad Sami ◽  
Edward Mills ◽  
Jean-François Hocquette
Author(s):  
A.V. Fisher ◽  
G. Cook ◽  
G.A.J. Fursey ◽  
G.R. Nute

Purchasing specifications for beef carcasses have been aimed at reducing carcass variability and elevating the visual and keeping qualities of retail cuts. But more recently, the Meat and Livestock Commission's blueprint for improved consistent quality beef has incorporated a number of post-mortem treatments aimed at improving tenderness. Do these treatments which include electrical stimulation, pelvic bone suspension, slow chilling and prolonged ageing, exert an influence on quality which masks the intrinsic variation due to the primary production factors of feed, age, sex and possibly breed, or are the production and post-mortem effects additive? To what extent are the post-mortem treatments themselves additive?


1989 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.E. LYON ◽  
C.E. DAVIS ◽  
J.A. DICKENS ◽  
C.M. PAPA ◽  
J.O. REAGAN

Meat Science ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 77 (3) ◽  
pp. 372-383 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristin Hollung ◽  
Eva Veiseth ◽  
Terje Frøystein ◽  
Laila Aass ◽  
Øyvind Langsrud ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 52 (12) ◽  
pp. 894-897 ◽  
Author(s):  
RIËTTE L. J. M. VAN LAACK ◽  
GIJS EIKELENBOOM ◽  
FRANS J. M. SMULDERS

From eight cows, following electrical stimulation, the righthand-side longissimus and psoas major muscles were hot boned within 1 1/2 h post mortem, vacuum packaged and chilled at 1±1°C. The lefthand longissimus and psoas major muscles were cold boned and vacuum packaged after the carcasses had been chilled for 24 h (i.e. 1 1/2 h at −1 to −4°C, 3 m.s−1 immediately after slaughter followed by chilled storage at 1 ± 1°C). After 12 d of storage at 1 ± 1°C all primals were unpacked and cut into steaks which were subsequently displayed at 3±1°C under continuous illumination with a 300–400 Lux lamp. At days 0, 2, and 4 the color of the steaks was measured both instrumentally (Hunter L*, a*, b* and spectrum analysis) and visually (6-member butcher-panel). After 4 d of display steaks from hot boned psoas major muscles had a more stable color (higher a*- and chroma-values) than steaks from cold boned counterparts (P<0.05) which coincided with slightly, though not significantly, better color scores (P<0.10). The color stability of the longissimus muscle was not affected by time of boning. It is concluded that the color-stabilizing effect of hot boning is fairly small and probably of marginal significance to the retailer when electrical stimulation is included in the slaughtering process.


1996 ◽  
Vol 75 (9) ◽  
pp. 1118-1120 ◽  
Author(s):  
L.T. WALKER ◽  
S.G. BIRKHOLD ◽  
I.S. KANG ◽  
E.M. HIRSCHLER ◽  
A.R. SAMS

1998 ◽  
Vol 66 (2) ◽  
pp. 329-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. D. Sinclair ◽  
A. Cuthbertson ◽  
A. Rutter ◽  
M. F. Franklin

AbstractAn experiment was devised to examine the effect of animal age at slaughter, within genotype and finishing system, on bull beef eating quality characteristics to assess the 15 month age limit imposed for bulls at slaughter by the Meat and Livestock Commission specification for improved beef eating quality. The experiment was a factorial design using bulls of two crossbred genotypes (Aberdeen Angus × and Charolais ×), offered two diets (silage-based and barley-based) and slaughtered at two abattoirs. Bulls were slaughtered from approximately 10 months of age on seven dates (ages) at 6-week intervals. Bulls given barley were slaughtered on date numbers 1 to 5 (43 to 67 weeks of age) and bulls given silage on date numbers 2 to 7 (49 to 79 weeks of age). On each slaughter date and at each abattoir the first four commercial steers which followed the bulls on the slaughterline and met the United Kingdom (UK) modal carcass specification R 4L were selected as abattoir, slaughter date and industry representative controls. At 48 h post mortem samples of m. longissimus lumborum; m. biceps femoris; and m. semimembranosus were recovered from all bull and steer carcasses, vacuum packed and stored at 2°C for a fiirther 12 days before freezing and subsequent assessment by a 12 member taste panel and texture analysis using a Warner Bratzler shear jig.Bulls achieved high growth rates during the finishing period averaging 1·22, 1·55, 1·41 and 1·98 kg/day for silage-fed Angus × bulls; barley-fed Angus × bulls; silage-fed Charolais × bulls; and barley-fed Charolais × bulls, respectively (s.e.d. = 0·08; P < 0·05). Age at slaughter had no significant effect on beef tenderness from young bulls in this study. Similarly, no significant differences in beef tenderness either between genotypes or diets were detected. Bulls, however, produced meat which had lower mechanical shear force values (10·2 v. 11·9 kg for m. biceps femoris; P < 0·001) and was considered to be more tender (P < 0·001), less flavoursome (F < 0·001) and more acceptable (P < 0·01) than that produced by steers.It was concluded that beef aged for 14 days post mortem and recovered from young bulls which have achieved high growth rates can be at least as good as that representative of the UK standard product. The 15-month age limit for bulls ensures that commercially produced bulls achieve high lifetime growth rates and will produce beef of a quality comparable with that achieved in this study.


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