Document details

Effect of salting and ripening on the physicochemical and sensory quality of goat and sheep cured legs

Author(s): Teixeira, Alfredo ; Fernandes, Aline ; Pereira, Etelvina ; Manuel, Aristides ; Rodrigues, Sandra

Date: 2017

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10198/15066

Origin: Biblioteca Digital do IPB

Subject(s): Sheep; Goat; Cured legs; Chemical composition; Fatty acids profile


Description

Physicochemical and sensory characteristics of sheep and goat cured legs were evaluated. The pH values (5.7–5.8) and aw (0.87 and 0.83) found to be adequate to control meat deterioration, promoting safety and stability to shelf life of products with respect to microbial growth. The high protein (46.2 and 38.4%) and low fat (5.3 and 8.7%) percentages of the goat and sheep cured legs were the main evidence of the effect of salting and ripening processes. A low cholesterol content of 4.5% is particularly evident in sheep cured legs. Curing process produced a slight increase in the P/S ratio 0.23 and 0.17 for goat and sheep cured legs, respectively. TBARS values are much lower than the value of 2 mg of MDA/Kg which is the upper limit of rancidity. Physico-chemical and sensory characteristics indicate that producing cured goat and sheep legs from cull animals can be an interesting way of adding value to animals with very low commercial prices.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
Contributor(s) Biblioteca Digital do IPB
facebook logo  linkedin logo  twitter logo 
mendeley logo

Related documents

No related documents