Tenderness is an important sensory attribute to the overall eating experience of beef. Identifying novel methods to ensure consistent tenderness, especially in inherently tough cuts, is critical for the industry. This study investigated if tumbling without brine inclusion could be an effective method to improve the quality and palatability attributes of beef longissimus lumborum (LL) and semitendinosus (ST) steaks. Furthermore, interactions with postmortem aging were evaluated to determine how tumbling might affect protein degradation and muscle ultrastructure. At 5 d postmortem, pairs of LL and ST muscles from beef carcasses (n = 16) were bisected, vacuum packaged, and tumbled for 0, 40, 80, or 120 min. Sections were divided and subsequently aged an additional 0 or 10 d at 2 °C. Tumbling for any duration improved instrumental tenderness of LL (P < 0.001) but not ST (P > 0.05) steaks, regardless of aging time. Tumbling exacerbated moisture loss in both muscles shown by greater purge and cooking losses (P < 0.05). Myofibrillar fragmentation was induced through tumbling in both muscles (P < 0.001), which was supported by transmission electron microscopy images. Tumbling for 120 min followed by 10 d of aging resulted in less abundant intact troponin-T in both LL and ST (P < 0.05), as well as less intact desmin in ST (P < 0.05); however, calpain-1 autolysis was not affected by tumbling (P > 0.05). No effects of tumbling, aging, nor the interaction were found for the content and solubility of collagen (P > 0.05). Consumer panelists (n = 120/muscle) rated LL steaks tumbled for any duration higher for tenderness and overall liking compared to control steaks (P < 0.05). For ST, significant interactions were found for consumer liking of tenderness and juiciness. In general, tumbling without subsequent aging resulted in poorer juiciness than non-tumbled (P < 0.05), while at 10 d no differences in juiciness were found between treatments (P > 0.05). For ST steaks that were aged 10 d, 120 min of tumbling resulted in greater tenderness liking than non–tumbled steaks (P < 0.05). These results suggest that tumbling would result in myofibrillar fragmentation and may benefit the degradation of myofibrillar proteins; however, there would be negligible impacts on collagen. Accordingly, tumbling without brine inclusion alone may be sufficient to improve tenderness and overall liking of LL steaks, while combined tumbling with subsequent postmortem aging would be necessary to improve tenderness liking of ST.
The aim of this study was to determine the effects of tumbling at different post-mortem times on the proteolytic features and quality attributes of beef loins (M. longissimus lumborum). Loins (n = 12) were cut into 4 sections and assigned to tumbling at 1, 6 or 11 days post-mortem or non-tumbled control. Upon tumbling, additional ageing was applied to a common post-mortem time of 16 days. In general, tumbling had no considerable impacts on water-holding ability of samples. Tumbling resulted in an immediate decrease in shear force values (WBSF) of beef samples. Tumbling at 1 day post-mortem with no ageing had similar WBSF compared to the non-tumbled controls at 16 days (P > 0.05). With ageing, tumbling increased amounts of protein degradation, myofibrillar fragmentation and calpain-1 autolysis of samples. These results suggest that early post-mortem tumbling coupled with ageing can synergistically impact the tenderness development of beef loins and shorten the necessary ageing period.
This study evaluated the impacts of in utero heat stress (IUHS) on the carcass and meat quality traits of offspring when market weight was reached. Twenty-four F1 Landrace × Large White gilts were blocked by body weight and allocated among thermoneutral (IUTN) or IUHS treatments from d 6 to d 59 of gestation. The offspring were raised under identical thermoneutral conditions, and gilts (n = 10/treatment) at market weight (117.3 ± 1.7 kg) were harvested. At 24 h postmortem, the loins (M. longissimus lumborum) were obtained, and sections were allocated among 1 d and 7 d aging treatments at 2 °C. Carcasses from IUHS pigs had lower head and heart weights (p < 0.05), as well as decreased loin muscle area (p < 0.05) compared to IUTN pigs. Loins from the IUHS group had a higher shear force value than the IUTN group (p < 0.05). Treatments had no other impacts on carcass and meat quality traits (p > 0.05), and Western blots suggested increased toughness of IUHS loins would not be attributed to proteolysis. These results suggest minimizing IUHS during the first half of gestation may be beneficial in improving pork yield and quality, though in general the effects of IUHS would be minimal.
Beef muscles from mature cows and bulls, especially those originating from the extremities of the carcass, are considered as underutilized due to unsatisfactory palatability. However, beef from culled animals comprises a substantial proportion of the total slaughter in the US and globally. Modern consumers typically favor cuts suitable for fast, dry-heat cookery, thereby creating challenges for the industry to market inherently tough muscles. In general, cull cow beef would be categorized as having a lower extent of postmortem proteolysis compared to youthful carcasses, coupled with a high amount of background toughness. The extent of cross-linking and resulting insolubility of intramuscular connective tissues typically serves as the limiting factor for tenderness development of mature beef. Thus, numerous post-harvest strategies have been developed to improve the quality and palatability attributes, often aimed at overcoming deficiencies in tenderness through enhancing the degradation of myofibrillar and stromal proteins or physically disrupting the tissue structure. The aim of this review is to highlight existing and recent innovations in the field that have been demonstrated as effective to enhance the tenderness and palatability traits of mature beef during the chilling and postmortem aging processes, as well as the use of physical interventions and enhancement.
This study investigated the effect of fresh beef tumbling and postmortem ageing on the quality and proteolysis of loins from cull cows. Loins (M. longissimus lumborum) from twelve carcasses (Holstein breed, fat utility, >30 months) were obtained at 5d postmortem, sectioned, and assigned to three treatments (NT, T: tumbled, and TS: tumbled with spike mat). The beef sections were cut into halves and assigned to ageing treatments (0d or 14d). No significant tumbling impacts were found on instrumental tenderness, proteolysis (desmin and troponin-T degradation and myofibrillar fragmentation) of cull cow beef loins. Tumbling did not affect the initial purge, drip or thaw loss of beef samples (P > 0.05), while TS induced higher moisture losses compared with NT (P < 0.05). Significant interactions between tumbling and ageing treatments were found, where consumer panel determined higher tenderness liking and overall liking of tumbled beef loins (T and TS) compared to NT without further ageing. However, after additional 2 weeks of ageing, no differences between treatments were observed in those sensory attributes (P > 0.05). These results indicate that fresh beef tumbling could be an effective, simple and natural method to improve tenderness of cull cow beef loins.
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