| Literature DB >> 33256241 |
Diana I Santos1, Maria João Fraqueza2, Hugo Pissarra2, Jorge A Saraiva3, António A Vicente4, Margarida Moldão-Martins1.
Abstract
Dehydrated pineapple by-products enriched in bromelain using a hydrostatic pressure treatment (225 MPa, 8.5 min) were added in marinades to improve beef properties. The steaks from the silverside cut (2 ± 0.5 cm thickness and weight 270 ± 50 g), characterized as harder and cheaper, were immersed in marinades that were added to dehydrated and pressurized pineapple by-products that corresponded to a bromelain concentration of 0-20 mg tyrosine, 100 g-1 meat, and 0-24 h time, according to the central composite factorial design matrix. Samples were characterized in terms of marination yield, pH, color, and histology. Subsequently, samples were cooked in a water-bath (80 °C, 15 min), stabilized (4 °C, 24 h), and measured for cooking loss, pH, color, hardness, and histology. Marinades (12-24 h) and bromelain concentration (10-20 mg tyrosine.100 g-1 meat) reduced pH and hardness, increased marination yield, and resulted in a lighter color. Although refrigeration was not an optimal temperature for bromelain activity, meat hardness decreased (41%). Thus, the use of pineapple by-products in brine allowed for the valorization of lower commercial value steak cuts.Entities:
Keywords: bromelain; enzyme activity; hydrostatic pressure; marinade; meat; pineapple by-products; texture
Year: 2020 PMID: 33256241 PMCID: PMC7760178 DOI: 10.3390/foods9121752
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158