| Literature DB >> 30826630 |
Johanna Mörlein1, Lisa Meier-Dinkel2, Jan Gertheiss3, Wolfram Schnäckel4, Daniel Mörlein5.
Abstract
While forming mixtures is a widely used approach for other raw materials in food industry, it has not yet been systematically analyzed for boar tainted meat. That is why we simultaneously studied four factors relevant for the production of emulsion-type sausages: percentage boar meat (skatole concentrations up to 0.3 μg/g, androstenone up to 3.8 μg/g in melted backfat), duration of traditional smoke and concentration levels of two spices. 16 variants of Frankfurters were produced in two independent studies and evaluated by in total 211 consumers. A linear mixed effects model revealed that increased levels of boar tainted meat significantly reduced consumer acceptance which could not be compensated by increased smoke or spice levels. We propose a non-inferiority test to identify the mixture which is similarly accepted as the reference made without boar tainted meat. Up to 33% tainted boar meat is proposed, assuming a liking drop of 0.5 on a 9 point liking scale as benchmark for an inferior product.Entities:
Keywords: Androstenone; Animal welfare; Blending; Non-inferiority test; Off-flavor; Pork production; Skatole; Sustainability
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30826630 DOI: 10.1016/j.meatsci.2019.02.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Meat Sci ISSN: 0309-1740 Impact factor: 5.209