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Effect of temperature–time pretreatments on the texture and microstructure of abalone ( Haliotis discus hanai )
Author(s) -
Dong Xiuping,
Hou Yawen,
Wang Yang,
Xu Xianbing,
Wang Kexin,
Zhao Meiyu,
Prakash Sangeeta,
Yu Chenxu
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of texture studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.593
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1745-4603
pISSN - 0022-4901
DOI - 10.1111/jtxs.12354
Subject(s) - abalone , haliotis discus , microstructure , food science , fishery , raw material , materials science , chemistry , biology , composite material , ecology
The effects of temperature/time pretreatments on the texture and microstructure of abalone ( Haliotis discus hanai ) meat with the same myofibril extraction rate (60–66.7%) were investigated. The abalone samples were categorized into control and four treatment groups of different heating temperature/heating time combinations as 50°C/120 min, 60°C/10 min, 70°C/5 min, and 80°C/2 min, respectively. Compared to the control samples, the abalone samples heated at 60°C/10 min were the most tender (minimum shear force). It is clear that a sharp reduction in hardness was observed in heat treated abalone meat samples, compared to the raw samples. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) showed that the water distribution pattern in abalone samples changed as they were experiencing different heat treatments. Particularly, the immobilized water components in samples heated at 60°C/10 min increased significantly. The textural properties of these samples evaluated after an 80 s‐reheating by microwave were of superior quality. It is concluded that the optimal condition for pretreatment abalone was 60°C/10 min, which could significantly improve the textural properties of preprocessed abalones. Practical applications Ready‐to‐eat foods can either be consumed directly, or further prepared according to consumers' preference. They are processed and packed following scientifically defined criteria to meet ready‐to‐eat requirements. For consumers, the quality of the food is one of the most important factors affecting purchasing decisions. Pretreatment through heating plays a key role in determining the eating quality of the product. Our study investigated the effects of pretreatment temperature and time on the food quality. These findings will establish optimal conditions for pretreating abalone to develop high‐quality ready‐to‐eat food products.

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