| Literature DB >> 35010232 |
Klaudia Kołodziejczak1, Anna Onopiuk1, Arkadiusz Szpicer1, Andrzej Poltorak1.
Abstract
There are many reasons why consumers and food producers are looking for alternatives to meat and meat products, which includes the following: health, environmental or ethical aspects. This study reviews recent scientific reports on meat analogues. The scope of the review includes the following: formulation and nutritional value; health safety and legal regulations; manufacturing and processing technologies including the latest developments in this area; product availability on the food market; and consumer attitudes towards meat analogues. The analysis of the literature data identified technological challenges, particularly in improving consumer acceptability of meat analogues. Among the risks and limitations associated with the production of meat analogues, the following were identified: contamination from raw materials and the risk of harmful by-products due to intensive processing; legal issues of product nomenclature; and consumer attitudes towards substituting meat with plant-based alternatives. The need for further research in this area, particularly on the nutritional value and food safety of meat analogues, was demonstrated.Entities:
Keywords: consumer acceptance; consumption; meat alternatives; plant-based meat
Year: 2021 PMID: 35010232 PMCID: PMC8750317 DOI: 10.3390/foods11010105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Composition of meat analogues in scientific research.
| Product Type | Composition | Tested Parameters | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| meat analogue | soy protein concentrate, wheat gluten, vegetable oil, pumpkin powder, wheat starch, salt | protein content, moisture, pH, colour, textural properties, sensory properties, microscopy, protein solubility | Chiang et al. 2019 [ |
| chicken analogue | wheat gluten, soy protein isolate, water, soybean oil, wheat starch | protein content, moisture, pH, textural properties analysis, scanning electron microscopy, total amino acids, protein solubility | Chiang et al. 2021 [ |
| meat analogue | soy protein isolate, wheat gluten, water, salt | pH, maximum swelling, water holding capacity, ionic strength | Cornet et al. 2021 [ |
| meat analogue | pea protein isolates, defatted soy protein isolates, oat protein | protein content, texture profile analysis, water absorption, oil absorption, sensory analysis | De Angelis et al. 2020 [ |
| meat analogue | protein concentrate from faba beans | specific mechanical energy (SME), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), colour, cooking yield, water binding capacity, oil binding capacity, textural properties, sensory evaluation | do Carmo et al. 2021 [ |
| meat analogue | soy protein isolate, wheat gluten, and natural flavor powder | volatile compounds profile, scanning electron microscopy, low-field nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), fourier transform-infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy | Guo et al. 2020 [ |
| meat analogue | rapeseed protein concentrate, soy protein concentrate, wheat gluten, water, salt | macrostructure, color, tensile strength, scanning electron microscopy, confocal laser scanning microscopy, X-ray microtomography | Jia et al. 2021 [ |
| high moisture extruted (HME) protein | soy protein isolate, whey protein concentrate | texture, cryo-imaging, micro-CT, rheological measurements, scanning electron microscopy | Wittek et al. 2021 [ |
Figure 1Types of meat analogues available on the market.
Research on consumer attitudes towards meat analogues, meat and plant-based diet.
| Study Subject | Participants: | Main Parameters: | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| meat disgust | 711 participants from UK | age, gender, disgust sensitivity, self-control, meat intake, hunger level, english level, meat disgust dummy (% meat disgusted), diet | Becker and Lawrence 2021 [ |
| plant-based and cultured meat | 2019: 1001 and 2020: 1000 participants from Belgium | age, gender, diet, region, education, rural/urban, satisfaction with existing meat analogues, concern for: animal welfare, impact on the environment, sustainability of choices, health, purchase intent for cultured meat, cultured meat meets their needs | Bryant and Sanctorum 2021 [ |
| plant-based meat analogues | 1434 Midwest University Students (USA) | age, gender, race, residency, fruit and vegetable servings per day, diet, environmental values, beliefs, knowledge, spirituality, views about vegetarianism, factors influencing food purchase, trusted sources of nutrition knowledge, meat analogues consumption | Davitt et al. 2021 [ |
| insect-based and plant-based protein | 3091 participants from 9 countries | food neophobia, food tech neophobia, healthiness influence, environmental impact, influence, meat nutritional importance, meat taste, texture, smell importance, plant-based and insect-based protein suitability/benefits, plant-based and insect-based protein willingness to try, buy and pay more | De Koning et al. 2020 [ |
| plant-based diet | data from the NZAVS 1 | self-reported dietary behaviour, protection of native species, subjective health, perceived environmental efficacy, gender, political conservatism, right-wing ideology, disgust, religious (spiritual), beliefs, pro-social orientation, openness orientation | Milfont et al. 2021 [ |
| plant-based and cultured meat burgers | 533 participants | frequency of purchase (meat, burgers and meat substitutes), importance od factors in purchase decision, support for food technology, attitudes towards: agriculture, naturalness of food, lab food, environmental impact of meat, food choices, political views, science, emotional decision making, age, gender, education, income, diet | Slade 2018 [ |
1 New Zealand Attitudes and Values Study.
Figure 2Advantages, risks, technological challenges, and research gaps associated with meat analogues (PAH- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons; HCA- heterocyclic aromatic amines).