Dietary fibers, starches, and Polydextroseo were incorporated unhydrated into 5 and 10% fat hamburger for texture modification and comparison to 5, 10, 20, and 30% fat controls. Levels for individual and total ingredients ranged from 0.5 to 4% and 3.5 to 6%, respectively. Treatments containing Polydextrose, starch, and fiber had cooking losses 20-40% less than controls. Patties containing three-way combinations of ingredients were more similar to 20% fat controls for texture traits than were those containing 1 or 2 ingredients: Patties with ingredients had less oily coating of the mouth, but were less juicy than controls. Beef flavor intensity scores were reduced slightly for low-fat patties with ingredients. Texture modification of low-fat ground beef is possible with food-grade ingredients.
Ground beef patties containing 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, and 30% fat were evaluated raw and after cooking to either 71 or 77°C. Cooking losses were lowest for S-20% fat patties (24.7-26-O%), intermediate for 25% fat patties (2&g%), and highest for 30% fat patties (32.1%). Low-fat patties (5 and 10%) were firmer in texture, more crumbly at end-ofchewing, less juicy and flavorful, and caused less oily coating of the mouth than 20-30% fat patties. Warner-Bratzler and Lee-Kramer shear forces decreased as fat increased. Instron texture profile analysis also indicated greater peak forces, springiness, and cohesiveness for lowfat patties. Cooking to 77 vs 71°C accentuated differences in palatability between low-and high-fat patties.
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