The aim was to evaluate smoked blood sausage prepared using goat blood (50%), viscera (10%) and meat fragments (20%). Microbiological, chemical and sensory evaluations were conducted. The quality analyses showed that smoked goat blood sausage is rich in high biological value proteins, amino acids, essential fatty acids, and iron (26.65mg/100g). The smoked goat blood sausage was rated to have a sensory acceptance of greater than 80%. The use of edible by-products from the slaughter of goats in the formulation of smoked blood sausage is viable because it uses low-cost raw materials; furthermore, the utilisation of these by-products can generate income for producers, allowing them to offer a meat product of high nutritional and sensory quality.
Broiler breast (pectoralis major) meat was submitted to salting with NaCl ? NaNO 3 followed by a drying process to produce jerky-type chicken. The final product (raw broiler charqui) was desalted and then cooked using grilled, roasted, fried and sous-vide techniques. Sous-vide cooked samples showed lowest results of moisture loss compared to roasted and fried ones. Fatty acid profile suffered minor changes after cooking of broiler charqui. Regarding to protein oxidation, tryptophan fluorescence, protein carbonylation and disulphide bonds formation of chicken charqui were affected by cooking temperature while free thiol groups, Schiff base formation and hardness were mostly impacted by the length of cooking. Instrumental color of broiler charqui was affected by the type of cooking, being closely related with Maillard products formation. In conclusion, sous-vide technique seems to be the most advantageous cooking method to obtain high-quality ready-to-eat chicken charqui.
Summary
The oxidative damage to proteins during processing of ready‐to‐eat chicken patties and its impact on the nutritional value and texture properties of the product were assessed. The effect of cooking techniques (boiling, roasting and grilling) and microwave reheating (600 mW per 1 min) after 7 and 14 days of cold storage (+4 °C) were studied. Cooking methods had an effect (P < 0.05) on most protein oxidation parameters, including protein depletion of tryptophan, thiols, protein carbonylation and formation of cross‐links. Overall, the succeeding chilled storage led to an aggravation of the oxidative damage which occurred along with hardness increase and impaired digestibility. Microwave reheating had contradictory effects on protein oxidation parameters. An increase in protein carbonylation occurred along with a cleavage of disulphide bonds that would explain a decrease in hardness. This study illustrates to which extent the oxidative damage to meat proteins affects protein quality and nutritional value of a severely processed meat product. The impact of assorted cooked procedures on these events is also discussed.
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