| Literature DB >> 24036259 |
Anna C V C S Canto1, Bruno R C Costa Lima, Surendranath P Suman, Cesar A Lazaro, Maria Lucia G Monteiro, Carlos A Conte-Junior, Monica Q Freitas, Adriano G Cruz, Erica B Santos, Teofilo J P Silva.
Abstract
Our objective was to examine the physico-chemical and sensory attributes of low-sodium restructured caiman steaks containing microbial transglutaminase (MTG) and salt replacers (KCl and MgCl2). Trimmings from caiman carcasses were processed into restructured steaks with or without MTG and salt replacers; the five treatments were CON (1.5% NaCl), T-1 (1.5% NaCl+1% MTG), T-2 (0.75% NaCl+1% MTG+0.75% KCl), T-3 (0.75% NaCl+1% MTG+0.75% MgCl2), and T-4 (0.75% NaCl+1% MTG+0.375% KCl+0.375% MgCl2). T-4 demonstrated the greatest (P<0.05) succulence and the lowest (P<0.05) values for cooked hardness, springiness, and cohesiveness. The greatest (P<0.05) purchase intention was for T-3. Furthermore, T-3 and T-4 were similar (P>0.05) to controls in salty flavor. Our findings suggest that the combination of MTG, KCl, and MgCl2 can be employed as a suitable salt reduction strategy in restructured caiman steaks without compromising sensory attributes and consumer acceptance.Entities:
Keywords: Caiman crocodilus yacare; Low-salt; Restructured meat; Salt replacers; Sodium reduction
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24036259 DOI: 10.1016/j.meatsci.2013.08.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Meat Sci ISSN: 0309-1740 Impact factor: 5.209