| Literature DB >> 27499656 |
Yun-Sang Choi1, Ko-Eun Hwang2, Tae-Jun Jeong2, Young-Boong Kim1, Ki-Hong Jeon1, Eun-Mi Kim1, Jung-Min Sung1, Hyun-Wook Kim3, Cheon-Jei Kim2.
Abstract
The effects of five different cooking methods (boiling, steaming, grilling, microwaving, and superheated steaming) on proximate composition, pH, color, cooking loss, textural properties, and sensory characteristics of chicken steak were studied. Moisture content and lightness value (L*-value) were higher in superheated steam cooked chicken steak than that of the other cooking treatments such as boiling, steaming, grilling and microwaving cooking (p<0.05), whereas protein content, redness value (a*-value), hardness, gumminess, and chewiness of superheated steam cooked chicken steak was lower than that in the other cooking treatments (p<0.05). Fat content and ash content, springiness, and cohesiveness were not significantly different among the chicken steak cooked using various methods (p>0.05). Among the sensory characteristics, tenderness score, juiciness score and overall acceptability score were the highest for the superheated steam samples (p<0.05), whereas no difference in flavor scores were observed among the other treatments (p>0.05). These results show that marinated chicken steak treated with superheated steam in a preheated 250℃ oven and 380℃ steam for 5 min until core temperature reached 75℃ improved the quality characteristics and sensory properties the best. Therefore, superheated steam was useful to improve cooked chicken steak.Entities:
Keywords: chicken steak; cooking methods; sensory characteristics; superheated steam; textural properties
Year: 2016 PMID: 27499656 PMCID: PMC4973943 DOI: 10.5851/kosfa.2016.36.1.1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Food Sci Anim Resour ISSN: 1225-8563 Impact factor: 2.622
Effect of different cooking methods on proximate composition of chicken steaks
| Parameters | BC | CO | GC | MC | SSC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moisture content (%) | 64.21±0.34C | 64.11±0.32C | 65.79±0.38B | 65.75±0.45B | 68.07±0.42A |
| Protein content (%) | 27.02±0.58A | 26.82±0.63A | 25.92±0.52B | 25.47±0.62B | 23.85±0.68C |
| Fat content (%) | 2.13±0.12 | 2.14±0.13 | 2.14±0.10 | 2.13±0.14 | 2.12±0.12 |
| Ash content (%) | 1.42±0.13 | 1.60±0.11 | 1.60±0.07 | 1.54±0.09 | 1.47±0.13 |
All values are mean±standard deviation of three replicates (n=9).
A-CMeans within a row with different letters are significantly different (p<0.05).
1)BC, chicken steak cooked with boiled; CO, chicken steak cooked with convective oven; GC, chicken steak cooked with grilling; MC, chicken steak cooked with microwave oven; SSC, chicken steak cooked with superheated steam.
Fig. 1.Effect of different cooking methods on cooking loss of chicken steaks. A-CMeans between treatments with different letters are significantly different (p<0.05) (n=9). 1)BC, chicken steak cooked with boiled; CO, chicken steak cooked with convective oven; GC, chicken steak cooked with grilling; MC, chicken steak cooked with microwave oven; SSC, chicken steak cooked with superheated steam.
Effect of different cooking methods on pH and color characteristics of chicken steaks
| Parameters | BC | CO | GC | MC | SSC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| pH | 5.98±0.07B | 5.94±0.08B | 6.09±0.04A | 5.85±0.08C | 5.86±0.06C |
| CIE L*-value | 93.43±0.87B | 90.90±0.64C | 82.21±2.35D | 91.38±0.61C | 95.15±0.64A |
| CIE a*-value | −0.05±0.57B | 0.39±0.62C | 4.59±0.77A | 1.95±0.24B | −1.01±0.26E |
| CIE b*-value | 3.39±0.63CD | 4.84±0.34C | 11.98±0.27A | 7.36±0.89B | 2.24±0.87D |
All values are mean±standard deviation of three replicates (n=9).
A-EMeans within a column with different letters are significantly different (p<0.05).
1)BC, chicken steak cooked with boiled; CO, chicken steak cooked with convective oven; GC, chicken steak cooked with grilling; MC, chicken steak cooked with microwave oven; SSC, chicken steak cooked with superheated steam.
Effect of different cooking methods on textural attributes of chicken steaks
| Parameters | BC | CO | GC | MC | SSC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hardness (kg) | 1.93±0.18A | 1.13±0.06B | 1.89±0.13A | 1.23±0.18B | 0.76±0.04C |
| Springiness | 0.73±0.04 | 0.75±0.05 | 0.76±0.03 | 0.79±0.04 | 0.71±0.06 |
| Cohesiveness | 0.49±0.03 | 0.48±0.04 | 0.48±0.03 | 0.47±0.03 | 0.45±0.05 |
| Gumminess (kg) | 1.41±0.11A | 0.84±0.08B | 1.45±0.11A | 0.97±0.19B | 0.54±0.07C |
| Chewiness (kg) | 1.03±0.06A | 0.64±0.06B | 1.11±0.10A | 0.76±0.18B | 0.39±0.08C |
All values are mean±standard deviation of three replicates (n=9).
A-CMeans within a row with different letters are significantly different (p<0.05).
1)BC, chicken steak cooked with boiled; CO, chicken steak cooked with convective oven; GC, chicken steak cooked with grilling; MC, chicken steak cooked with microwave oven; SSC, chicken steak cooked with superheated steam.
Effect of different cooking methods on sensory properties of chicken steaks
| Parameters | BC | CO | GC | MC | SSC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Color | 7.22±0.57B | 7.00±0.70B | 8.18±0.61A | 7.09±0.64B | 7.18±0.82B |
| Flavor | 7.18±0.75 | 7.23±0.81 | 7.82±0.67 | 7.73±0.68 | 7.27±0.85 |
| Tenderness | 6.73±0.81C | 7.27±0.75B | 6.64±0.72C | 7.73±0.71B | 8.36±0.71A |
| Juiciness | 6.55±0.82C | 7.00±0.74B | 6.54±0.75C | 7.42±0.77B | 8.18±0.72A |
| Overall acceptability | 6.82±0.48C | 7.36±0.45B | 7.55±0.71B | 7.45±0.72B | 8.09±0.65A |
All values are mean±standard deviation of three replicates (n=9).
A-CMeans within a row with different letters are significantly different (p<0.05).
Sensory scores were evaluated using a 10-point descriptive scale.
1)BC, chicken steak cooked with boiled; CO, chicken steak cooked with convective oven; GC, chicken steak cooked with grilling; MC, chicken steak cooked with microwave oven; SSC, chicken steak cooked with superheated steam.