Food and Nutrition Sciences

Volume 6, Issue 16 (December 2015)

ISSN Print: 2157-944X   ISSN Online: 2157-9458

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.92  Citations  h5-index & Ranking

Effect of Type I and Type II Antioxidants on Oxidative Stability, Microbial Growth, pH, and Color in Raw Poultry Meat

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 928KB)  PP. 1541-1551  
DOI: 10.4236/fns.2015.616159    4,549 Downloads   5,904 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Meat color is an intrinsic property that plays a major role in consumer’s perception. Lipid oxidation by-products as well as free iron can adversely affect meat color. This study was to compare the effect of Type I (radical quenching) antioxidants eugenol and rosmarinic acid (RA) to that of Type II (metal chelating) antioxidants milk mineral (MM), phytate, and sodium tri-polyphosphate (STPP) in raw ground chicken patties packed with a single layer of polyvinylchloride (PVC) overwrap. Packaged patties were stored at 4 and analyzed on 0, 1, 4, 7, and 10 days for pH, surface color, extent of lipid oxidation, oxymyoglobin content, and microbial load. Color stability was measured using Hunter MiniScan calorimeter (L*, a*, b* values). An effect was observed in L* values (P < 0.05) of meat color between treatments due to the type of antioxidant. Lightness values for STPP and phytate were low and differed (P < 0.05) from eugenol and rosmarinic acid. Milk mineral effectively preserved fresh color and slowed lipid oxidation in chicken patties by day 10. Aerobic plate counts increased over the entire testing period while values for lightness, redness, yellowness and chroma decreased indicating an increase in pH favored microbial spoilage of the meat or vice versa. By day 10, eugenol and MM were more effective and significantly different (P < 0.05) than STPP in controlling lipid oxidation measured as thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (0.198 mg/kg, 0.198 mg/kg, and 0.268 mg/kg, respectively). A positive correlation (r = 0.24, P < 0.005) between lipid oxidation and color saturation was observed indicating that poultry color darkened with increasing lipid oxidation levels.

Share and Cite:

Khan, A. , Allen, K. and Wang, X. (2015) Effect of Type I and Type II Antioxidants on Oxidative Stability, Microbial Growth, pH, and Color in Raw Poultry Meat. Food and Nutrition Sciences, 6, 1541-1551. doi: 10.4236/fns.2015.616159.

Cited by

[1] Effect of Time and Temperature on Physicochemical and Microbiological Properties of Sous Vide Chicken Breast Fillets
2021
[2] A Comparative Study on the Effects of Use Hemp Seed Oil Substitute to Soybean Oil in Growing Quail Diets
… Journal of Agriculture-Food Science and …, 2021
[3] Eugenol as an antimicrobial wash treatment reduces Campylobacter jejuni in postharvest poultry
2019
[4] Pectin or chitosan coating fortified with eugenol reduces Campylobacter jejunion chicken wingettes and modulates expression of critical survival genes
2019
[5] Pectin or chitosan coating fortified with eugenol reduces Campylobacter jejuni on chicken wingettes and modulates expression of critical survival genes
Poultry Science, 2018
[6] Improving physicochemical, antioxidative and sensory quality of raw chicken meat by using acorn extracts
LWT, 2018
[7] Potential of Commercial Spice Mixes to Enhance the Quality and to Extend the Shelf Life of Raw Chicken Breasts
Journal of World’s Poultry Research, 2017
[8] Antimicrobial and Antioxidant Properties of Phosphates Used in Meat Products
2017
[9] Türk Tarım-Gıda Bilim ve Teknoloji Dergisi
2017
[10] Acompanhamento do controlo da qualidade e da segurança alimentar em armazém num grande distribuidor do mercado retalhista
Dissertation, Open Repository of the University of Porto, 2016
[11] Farklı pişirme teknikleri ile üretilen piliç bonfile etinin depolama boyunca renk, tekstür ve duyusal özelliklerinin incelenmesi

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.