This study compares the effects of four different smoking processes on the sensorial and physicochemical characteristics of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) fillets. Two commercial liquid smoke flavourings (FA and FB) and two types of wood used for cold-smoking wood smoke generation (BS: Beech wood and OS: Oak wood) are investigated. Comparisons were made over a 45 day storage period. Control salmon samples (Cn) (i.e., samples that underwent no smoke treatment of any kind) were characterised by their low colour intensity, firmness, fat release and fibrousness and high adhesiveness, pH, TBARS and TMA values, and a strong amine odour. Fillets treated with smoke flavouring FA showed characteristics very similar to those of the Cn samples, however their colour and smoke odour are more intense and their adhesiveness, amine odour and TMA values lower. Fish treated with smoke flavouring FB show low brightness and pH, but high firmness, elasticity, colour intensity and a high expressible water content. Salmon samples smoked with BS or OS smoke had a low intensity amine odour as well as low brightness, pH, TBARS and TMA values, high colour and smoke odour intensities, and a high fat release value. The effect of storage time on sensorial and physicochemical parameters was evident: the values recorded for certain characteristics decrease, such as, colour intensity, elasticity or firmness, and others increase, such as, amine odour, expressible water content or TMA, and some showing a linear relationship with time (elasticity or amine odour intensity).
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