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Marbling Texture’s Effects on Beef Palatability
Author(s) -
K. R. Vierck,
J. M. Gonzalez,
T. A. Houser,
Elizabeth A.E. Boyle,
T. G. O’Quinn
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
meat and muscle biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2575-985X
DOI - 10.22175/mmb2017.10.0052
Subject(s) - marbled meat , palatability , tenderness , flavor , food science , taste , mathematics , loin , texture (cosmology) , zoology , chemistry , biology , computer science , artificial intelligence , image (mathematics)
The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of marbling texture on consumer and trained sensory panel ratings of beef strip loin steaks from 3 USDA quality grades. Beef strip loins (n = 117) were selected from 3 quality grades [Top Choice (Modest00 – Moderate100 marbling), Low Choice (Small00 – Small100 marbling), and Select (Slight00 – Slight100 marbling)] to equally represent three different marbling texture groups: fine, medium, and coarse, via visual appraisal. There were no quality grade × texture interactions (P > 0.05) for all of the traits evaluated. Consumers (n = 104) rated all marbling texture groups similar (P > 0.05) for tenderness, juiciness, flavor, and overall liking, as well as rated a similar (P > 0.05) percentage of samples from each marbling texture group acceptable for each palatability trait. Moreover, consumers indicated no preference (P > 0.05) among marbling texture groups for visual desirability or likelihood to purchase. However, trained sensory panelists rated coarse marbled steaks higher (P 0.05) among marbling texture groups for Warner-Bratzler shear force, slice shear force, and pressed juice percentage. Low Choice steaks were rated higher (P 0.05) to Top Choice. Results from this study indicate marbling texture had no impact on consumer evaluations of eating quality and only minimal effects on trained sensory panel palatability ratings and therefore provides no palatability-based evidence for the exclusion of coarse marbled carcasses from current and future branded beef programs.

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