Basic composition of meat: characteristics of protein and fat in muscles in common slaughter animals Flashcards

1
Q

Protein

A
  • most important muscle constituent
  • digestibility:
  • meat protein = 95%
  • plant protein = 85%
  • 3 groups:
  • myofibrillar proteins —> nutritional
  • sarcoplasmic proteins —> colour of meat (red)
  • connective tissue proteins or stromal proteins —> structural
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2
Q
  1. Myofibrillar proteins:
A
  • most important
  • insoluble in water but soluble in saline solution —> important for the manufacturing of certain
    meat products
  • salt must be added for tenderness, if not enough salt —> protein is not released —> meat is
    hard
  • composed of:
  • contractile proteins:
  • myosin —> thick filament, 50-60% - actin —> thin filament, 20%
  • regulatory proteins: troponin and tropomyosin (7%)
  • cytoskeletal proteins: titin, actinin, nebulin, desmin, systemin, other structural proteins (23%)
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3
Q
  1. Sarcoplasmic proteins:
A
  • water soluble
  • soft protein structure containing most of the red muscle pigment myoglobin
  • composed of:
  • creatine kinase
  • myoglobin and hemoglobin = the two main pigments, most important - various proteases
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4
Q
  • major chemical forms of myoglobin:
A
  • deoxymyoglobin: ferrous (Fe2+) heme iron, low O2, associated with vacuum packaging =
    purplish-red/purplish-pink colour
  • oxymyoglobin: unstable, ferrous heme iron, cut meat exposed to O2 = bright cherry red colour
    —> as exposure increases, oxymyoglobin penetrates deeper
  • metymyoglobin: oxidation of ferrous to ferric (Fe3+), low O2 required = brown colour —>
    surface discolouration
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5
Q
  1. Stromal proteins:
A

= connective tissue surrounding the fibres and unites them in bundles

  • intramuscular connective tissue (IMCT) consist of 3 main structural components:
  • endomysium = layer of thin connective tissue separating individual muscle fibres (contraction- relaxation)
  • perimysium = 90% of all IMCT, a layer of connective tissue that separates individual muscle fascicle in each muscle
  • epimysium =a binding of connective tissue defining and separating individual muscles
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6
Q

• collagen:

A
  • dissolves to gelatine in hot water, white in colour
  • most abundant protein in animal body (20-25% of total body protein): bone, tendon,
    ligaments, cartilage, skin
  • to transmit force and hold things together —> tough and inert
  • content varies according to muscle function and toughness increases with age (increased
    cross-linking)
  • positive function = binds water —> responsible for juiciness of meat
  • negative function:
  • high cross linkage (older animals) —> difficult culinary preparation as meat becomes tough
  • has little binding ability —> not very valuable in processed meat
  • heating of collagen:
  • if heated with moisture —> will shrink
  • of heated when dry —> become very hard and impermeable —> important when
    handling collagen and/or natural casings
  • highly resistant to enzymes —> enzyme tenderisers are ineffective
  • amino acids:
  • = glycine, proline, hydroxyproline
  • contain large amount of hydroxyproline which is lacking in other proteins —> commonly
    measured to determine collagen content
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7
Q

• elastin:

A
  • binds muscles together
  • tough and yellow in colour
  • doesn’t break down during cooking, needs to be cut away from the meat
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8
Q

• keratin:

A

horn, hoof, hair, feathers

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9
Q

Determination of protein content

- by Kjeldahl’s method

A
  • nitrogen estimation using neutralised HCl —> use 6,25 coefficient to calculate from the nitrogen protein content —> muscle contains about 16% of nitrogen
  • 3 steps: digestion, neutralisation and distillation, titration
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10
Q

Fat deposits in animal body

A
  • subcutaneous: 60-70%
  • surrounding organs: e.g. kidney 5%
  • intermuscular: 20-35%
  • intramuscular fat:
  • between muscle fibre bundles
  • lead in higher accumulations in marbling —> contributes to tenderness and flavour of meat
    —> ideal for steaks and roasted meat dishes
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11
Q

Fatty acids
- different content depending on species and type of muscle

  • saturated fatty acid:
A
  • palmitic acid —> second most abundant fatty acid in meat lipid content
  • stearic acid —> third most abundant fatty acid in meat lipid content
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12
Q

Fatty acids
- different content depending on species and type of muscle

  • unsaturated fatty acid:
A
  • oleic acid:
  • most abundant fatty acid in meat lipid content - pigs have higher amounts than cattle or sheep
  • linolenic acid
  • higher in soft fat: chicken > pork > beef
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13
Q
  • polyunsaturated fatty acid:
A
  • eicosapentanoic acid, decapapentaenoic acid

- omega 3 and omega 6 = essential polyunsaturated fatty acids

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14
Q

Determination of fat content

A
  • by Soxhlet method
  • weight comparing before and after the evaporation of organic solvent
  • estimate water content % before the procedure —> xylene through the sample —> fat is
    extracted —> calculate results
  • varies depending on the type of meat between 3-10%
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15
Q

Water

  • inversely related to fat content
  • total water is divided into:
  • bound H2O:
A
  • smallest compartment of water, 1-2%
  • strongest of the three
  • tightly associated with meat proteins —> nearly impossible to remove from meat
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16
Q

Water

  • inversely related to fat content
  • total water is divided into:
  • immobilised water:
A
  • upto80%
  • ranges from moderate electronic associations between water and muscle proteins to very
    weak associations
  • for meat processors: the more water that is immobilised —> the greater the water holding
    capacity (WHC)
17
Q

Water

  • inversely related to fat content
  • total water is divided into:
  • free water:
A
  • subject to lost —> e.g. easily lost after defrosting
  • some can be shifted into the immobilised —> more likely to be retained
  • free and bound water affect the shelf-life of meat
18
Q

Determination of water content

A
  • by drying the sample in the dryer at around 100°C —> compare weight before and after
  • water holding capacity (WHC):
  • most important technological characteristics of meat
  • high WHC is suitable for meat manufacturing
  • influenced by:
  • ration of plasma proteins and collagen proteins (binding water — negative effect)
  • content of salts increases WHC
  • stage of post-mortal changes:
  • best within up to 2h after slaughter: around 100% - 24h after slaugther —> WHC 20%

detection: by adding salt in different concentrations —> calculate

  • 120h after slaughter —> WHC 10%
  • worst WHC = rigor mortis
    temperature: the lower the temperature, the higher the WHC
    addition of foreign proteins (egg, milk, soy, wheat) —> increases WHC
    d) others Carbohydrates
  • glycogen (0,3-0,9%) and glucose (0,05%) - energy source
  • meat fermentation —> lactic acid