1. Short term supplementation rates to optimise vitamin E concentration for retail colour stability of Australian lamb meat.
- Author
-
Jose CG, Jacob RH, Pethick DW, and Gardner GE
- Subjects
- Animals, Australia, Biopsy veterinary, Crosses, Genetic, Female, Food Packaging, Lupinus chemistry, Male, Meat economics, Metmyoglobin analysis, Muscle, Skeletal chemistry, Muscle, Skeletal growth & development, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Myoglobin analysis, Oxidation-Reduction, Pigments, Biological biosynthesis, Protein Stability, Seeds chemistry, Sheep, Domestic growth & development, Vitamin E analysis, Vitamin E metabolism, alpha-Tocopherol analysis, Diet veterinary, Food Quality, Food Storage, Meat analysis, Pigments, Biological analysis, Sheep, Domestic metabolism, Vitamin E administration & dosage
- Abstract
The relationship between vitamin E supplementation rate and colour stability was investigated using 70 mixed sex 6-8 month old crossbred lambs. An initial group of 10 were slaughtered, while the remainder were fed a pellet ration containing either 30, 150, 275 or 400 IU vitamin E/kg ration or on green pasture for 56 days. After slaughter, carcases were halved; one side packed fresh (5 days) and the other in CO2 (21 days), both at 2°C. Five muscles were set for retail display for 96 h. The oxy/metmyoglobin ratio was measured every 12 h. Colour stability increased with increasing muscle vitamin E until an apparent maximum effect for vitamin E concentration (3.5-4.0mg α-tocopherol/kg tissue) was reached beyond which no further response was evident. This was reached within 3-4 weeks (275 IU treatment), and meat from these lambs should reach 60 h retail display with a satisfactory surface colour. This effect was most apparent in aerobic muscle types and meat aged post slaughter., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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