12 results on '"S. T. Joo"'
Search Results
2. Comparison of Live Performance and Meat Quality Parameter of Cross Bred (Korean Native Black Pig and Landrace) Pigs with Different Coat Colors
- Author
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S. J. Hur, T. C. Jeong, G. D. Kim, J. Y. Jeong, I. C. Cho, H. T. Lim, B. W. Kim, and S. T. Joo
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Carcass Weight ,Muscle Fiber Characteristics ,Crossbred Pig ,Pork Quality ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 ,Animal biochemistry ,QP501-801 - Abstract
Five hundred and forty crossbred (Korean native black pig×Landrace) F2 were selected at a commercial pig farm and then divided into six different coat color groups: (A: Black, B: White, C: Red, D: White spot in black, E: Black spot in white, F: Black spot in red). Birth weight, 21st d weight, 140th d weight and carcass weight varied among the different coat color groups. D group (white spot in black coat) showed a significantly higher body weight at each weigh (birth weight, 140th d weight and carcass weight) than did the other groups, whereas the C group (red coat color) showed a significantly lower body weight at finishing stage (140th d weight and carcass weight) compared to other groups. Meat quality characteristics, shear force, cooking loss and meat color were not significantly different among the different coat color groups, whereas drip loss was significantly higher in F than in other groups. Most blood characteristics were not significantly different among the different groups, except for the red blood cells.
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- 2013
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3. Possibility of Making Low-fat Sausages from Duck Meat with Addition of Rice Flour
- Author
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S. T. Joo, H. S. Yang, G. D. Kim, B. W. Kim, H. W. Seo, E. Y. Jung, and Md. Shawkat Ali
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Chemistry ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Low fat sausage ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Food science ,Rice flour ,Water content ,Food Science - Abstract
Low-fat sausages with or without 10% hydrated rice flour were made from duck, chicken and pork and their physical and sensory properties were compared. Results showed that moisture content did not differ significantly among the sausage batters. However, crude protein, crude fat and total ash content were significantly lower in the group with added rice flour compared with the no flour group. Crude protein and crude fat were the highest in pork sausages without rice flour (p) increased, while redness () decreased with adding rice flour in all meat type sausages. Results showed that hardness was significantly reduced when 10% rice flour was added to pork, chicken and duck meat (p
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- 2011
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4. Effect of Chilling Temperature of Carcass on Breast Meat Quality of Duck
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S. H. Moon, S. T. Joo, Y. H. Hwang, H. S. Yang, G. B. Park, J. Y. Jeong, and Md. Shawkat Ali
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Meat ,Time Factors ,Muscle shortening ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Biology ,Ice water ,Cold Temperature ,Ducks ,Water temperature ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Cooking ,Food science ,Water content - Abstract
An experiment was carried out to investigate whether variations in chill water temperature affect muscle shortening and meat quality in duck breast. Three chill water temperatures were applied to duck carcasses at 20 min postmortem for 30 min, including in ice water at 0 degrees C, in cold water at 10 degrees C, and in water at 20 degrees C. Results revealed that carcass temperatures were different (P0.05) at 50 and 120 min of postmortem with lower temperatures at the 0 degrees C treatment (P0.05). The pH over the first 24 h postmortem was not different (P0.05) among treatments, with the exception of 50 min postmortem. The pH of breast meat in the 0 degrees C treatment was higher (P0.05) than that of 20 degrees C treatment at 50 min postmortem (just after chilling). No other differences (P0.05) in pH existed among treatments. Drip loss, cooking loss, and moisture content were not different for breast meat samples that were chilled at different temperatures. Differences (P0.05) were found in CIE (L, a, and b) color values. Lightness (L) increased, whereas redness (a) decreased as the chill water temperature increased. Lower yellowness (b) was found in the breast meat samples at the 10 degrees C chill water temperature. However, shear force, sarcomere length, and protein solubility were not different (P0.05) among the breast meat samples chilled at different chill water temperatures. It may be concluded that chilling duck carcasses at different temperature ranges from 0 to 20 degrees C did not influence muscle shortening or meat quality, except in regard to breast meat color.
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- 2008
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5. Effect of Dietary Glycine Betaine on Pork Qualities During Storage
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S. J. Kwck, S. T. Joo, J. I. Lee, J. D. Lee, J. S. Kim, S. J. Hur, H. S. Yang, G. B. Park, and N. E. Huh
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Ecology ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Myristic acid ,Cold storage ,Loin ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Betaine ,chemistry ,Lipid oxidation ,Glycine ,TBARS ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Trimethylglycine ,Food science ,Food Science - Abstract
A total of 80 pigs were used to investigate the effect of dietary glycine betaine( N,N,N -trimethylglycine) onpork quality during cold storage. About 70 kg pigs were randomly alloted into one of four experimental dietgroups(0%, 0.2%, 0.4% and 0.6% glycine betaine). Pigs were slaughtered at approximately 110 kg liveweight, and pH, color(CIE L* a* b*), shear force, sarcomere length, lipid oxidation and composition of fat-ty acid were measured in pork loin for 13 days of cold storage. The concentration of glycine betaine inpork loin was significantly increased(P < 0.05) with incr easing of glycine betaine level in diet. Pork loinsfrom dietary betaine groups showed significantly higher muscle pH and lower CIE b* values compared tocontrol group after 13 days of storage. There were significant differences in shear force values among porkloins from diet groups at 24 hrs postmortem. However, pork loins from control diet showed longer sarco-mere length than those of dietary betaine groups. Dietar y glycine betaine increased the ratio of saturated fattyacids and decreased unsaturated fatty acids in pork loins. Especially the ratios of linoleic and myristic acid were de-creased with increasing dietary betaine level. However, d ietary glycine betaine did not affect lipid oxidation(TBARS) and sensory evaluation during cold storage.
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- 2004
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6. Effects of CLA-vegetable Oils and CLA-lard Additives on Quality Characteristics of Emulsion-type Sausage
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J. I. Lee, Suk Chun Kwack, J. D. Jung, J. H. Lee, J. W. Lee, G. B. Park, S. T. Joo, J. R. Lee, and Y. J. Ha
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,integumentary system ,Ecology ,Thiobarbituric acid ,Back fat ,Linolenic acid ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Conjugated linoleic acid ,food and beverages ,Fatty acid ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Emulsion ,TBARS ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Food science ,Quality characteristics ,Food Science - Abstract
Emulsion-type sausages were manufactured to investigate the effects of CLA-vegetable oils and CLA-lard on quality characteristics of emulsion-type sausage. Each treatments replaced pork back fat with CLA-corn oil (CLA-CO), CLA-safflower seed oil (CLA-SSO) and CLA-lard (CLA-LD) were stored during 1, 7, 14, 21 and 28 days at 4. The changes in physico-chemical properties, texture, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS), fatty acid composition and CLA content of each treatments were measured during 1, 7, 14, 21 and 28 days at 4. During storage, pH of control showed higher pH value than that of CLA-vegetable and CLA-lard treatments. The pH values of all treatments was significantly low at storage 14 days (p
- Published
- 2003
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7. Objectively Predicting Ultimate Quality of Post-Rigor Pork Musculature:II. Practical Classification Method on the Cutting-Line
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Byoung Chul Kim, J. M. Stevenson-Barry, R. G. Kauffman, C. Borggaard, Min Suk Rhee, S. T. Joo, Robyn D. Warner, and G. B. Park
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Lightness ,Animal science ,Marbled meat ,Classification methods ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Food science ,Food Science ,Mathematics - Abstract
To investigate the practical assessing method of pork quality, 302 carcasses were selected randomly to represent commercial conditions and were probed at 24 hr postmortem (PM) by Danish Meat Quality Marbling (MQM), Hennessy Grading Probe (HGP), Sensoptic Resistance Probe (SRP) and NWK pH-K21 meter (NpH). Also, filter paper wetness (FPW), lightness (L*), ultimate pH (pHu), subjective color (SC), firmness/wetness (SF) and marbling scores (SM) were recorded. Each carcass was categorized as either PSE (pale, soft and exudative), RSE (Reddish-pink, soft and exudative), RFN (reddish-pink, firm and non-exudative) or DFD (dark, firm and dry). When discriminant analysis was used to sort carcasses into four quality groups the highest proportion of correct classes was 65% by HOP 60% by MQM 52% by NpH and 32% by SRP. When independent variables were combined to sort carcasses into groups the success was only 67%. When RSE and RFN groups were merged so that there were only three groups (PSE, RSE+RFN, DFD) differentiating by color MQM was able to sort the same set of data into the new set of three groups with 80% accuracy. The proportions of correct classifications for HGP, NpH and SRP were 75%, 61% and 35% respectively. There was a decline in predication accuracy when only two groups, exudative (PSE and RES) and non exudative (RFN and DFD) were sorted. However when two groups designated PSE and non-PSE (RSE, RFN, and DFD) were sorted then the proportion of correct classification by MQM, HGP, SRP and NpH were 87%, 81%, 71% and 66% respectively. Combinations of variables only increased the prediction accuracy by 1 or 2% over prediction by MQM alone. When the data was sorted into three marbling groups based on SM this was not well predicted by any of the probe measurements. The best prediction accuracy was 72% by a combination of MQM and NpH.
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- 2000
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8. Transcriptome changes favoring intramuscular fat deposition in the longissimus muscle following castration of bulls
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J, Jeong, J, Bong, G D, Kim, S T, Joo, H-J, Lee, and M, Baik
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Male ,Adipogenesis ,Citric Acid Cycle ,Fatty Acids ,Muscle Fibers, Skeletal ,Protein Array Analysis ,Reproducibility of Results ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Oxidative Phosphorylation ,Succinate Dehydrogenase ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Animals ,Body Fat Distribution ,Cattle ,Lipid Peroxidation ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Transcriptome ,Orchiectomy - Abstract
Castration increases intramuscular fat (IMF) deposition, improving beef quality in cattle. The present study was performed to determine the global transcriptome changes following castration of bulls and to identify genes associated with IMF deposition in the longissimus dorsi (LM) of Korean cattle. A customized bovine CombiMatrix oligonucleotide microarray was constructed, and transcriptome changes following castration were determined by microarray hybridization. Transcriptome comparison between bulls and steers indicated that 428 of 8,407 genes were differentially expressed in the LM by greater than two fold (P0.05). Gene expression profiling indicated alterations in several pathways, including adipogenesis, fatty acid oxidation, tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation (OP), following castration. Castration upregulated transcription of adipogenic perilipin 2 (PLIN2) and visfatin, lipogenic fatty acid synthase, fatty acid esterification 1-acylglycerol-3-phosphate O-acyltransferase 5, and many fatty acid oxidation-related genes. Many TCA cycle and OP genes were also transcriptionally upregulated. Correlation analysis indicated that the IMF content in the LM was highly correlated with mRNA levels of PLIN2 (r = 0.70, P0.001), adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase), H(+)-transporting, lysosomal 42 kDa, V1 subunit C1 (ATP6V1C1: r = 0.66, P0.001), and cytochrome c oxidase assembly homolog 11 (COX11: r = 0.72, P0.001) genes in a pooled animal group of steers plus bulls, and significant correlations in the steer-alone group were maintained in the 3 genes, PLIN2 (r = 0.47, P0.05), ATP6V1C1 (r = 0.50, P0.05), and COX11 (r = 0.60, P0.01). In conclusion, our study provided evidence that castration shifts transcription of lipid metabolism genes, favoring IMF deposition by increasing adipogenesis, lipogenesis, and triglyceride synthesis. This study also indicated that castration increases transcription of genes involved in fatty acid oxidation and subsequent energy production (TCA and OP genes). Our microarray analysis provided novel information that castration alters the transcriptome associated with lipid/energy metabolism, favoring IMF deposition in the LM.
- Published
- 2013
9. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN COLOR AND WATER-HOLDING CAPACITY IN POSTRIGOR PORCINE LONGISSIMUS MUSCLE
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S. ‐T Joo, Byoung Chul Kim, R. G. Kauffman, and C. ‐J Kim
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Longissimus muscle ,Lightness ,Animal science ,Normal muscle ,Longissimus Thoracis ,Water holding capacity ,Anatomy ,Color space ,Food Science ,Mathematics - Abstract
A total 264 pork loins were selected to represent a wide range of pork quality of the longissimus thoracis et lumborum. CIE L*C*h color space showed a closer relationship to the subjective color score than L*a*b*color space. Lightness (L*) was the best measure to predict water-holding capacity (WHC). There were highly significant (p < 0.001) correlations between the measures of color and WHC, and curvilinear relationships between either WHC and color or pHu were observed. In normal muscle color range (reddish-pink), there was considerable variation in WHC. Within the RSE + RFN groups of muscles, less variation of WHC could be accounted for by variations in color measurements. Color and WHC were not closely related and suggest that the RSE (reddish-pink, soft, exudative) condition should be classified as a separate quality category of pork muscle.
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- 1995
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10. Properties of duck meat sausages supplemented with cereal flours
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G. B. Park, Y. H. Hwang, J. Y. Jeong, H. S. Yang, Md. Shawkat Ali, S. T. Joo, and S. H. Moon
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Moisture absorption ,Fat content ,Chemistry ,Flavour ,Flour ,Wheat flour ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Rice flour ,Meat Products ,Ducks ,Tallow ,Corn flour ,Taste ,Animals ,Food Technology ,Humans ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Food science ,Cooking ,Moisture retention ,Edible Grain - Abstract
Duck meat sausages were prepared using 10% beef fat (FDS) and 10% hydrated cereal flours including rice (RDS), wheat, corn, millet, and barley to replace fat. Control duck sausages (DS) were also prepared only with duck meat and duck meat plus 10% beef fat. Results showed that protein and fat contents significantly decreased and total expressible fluid reduced with the addition of cereal flours in duck sausage batters. The FDS had higher fat content and lower pH compared with others. Duck sausages with 10% supplemented wheat flour showed the lowest cooking loss among sausages and had similar redness and chroma values to FDS and DS. Texture analysis indicated that hardness of duck sausage significantly decreased when cereal flours and beef fat were added. In particular, RDS showed the lowest values for all texture measurements compared with others. Result of moisture absorption capacity suggested that the decrease in hardness in RDS was due to higher moisture retention for rice flour treatment. Sensory evaluation indicated that DS had significantly lower overall acceptability than RDS, due to its off-flavor, whereas RDS had higher overall acceptability than DS.
- Published
- 2009
11. Influence of slaughter weight and sex on yield and quality grades of Hanwoo (Korean native cattle) carcasses
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G B, Park, S S, Moon, Y D, Ko, J K, Ha, J G, Lee, H H, Chang, and S T, Joo
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Male ,Sex Characteristics ,Korea ,Meat ,Body Weight ,Body Composition ,Animals ,Cattle ,Female ,Orchiectomy - Abstract
To assess the effects of slaughter weight and sex on APGS (Animal Products Grading Service) quality and APGS yield grade of Korean Hanwoo (n = 20,881) cattle, data were collected from cow, bull, and steer carcasses during a 1-yr period. Factors used to determine quality grade (marbling, meat color, fat color, texture, and overall maturity score) and yield grade (cold carcass weight, adjusted fat thickness, and longissimus muscle area) by the Korean grading system were recorded. Both yield and quality grades were improved (P0.01) with heavier slaughter weight, but there was no difference in yield grade for Hanwoo cattle classes heavier than 551 kg (P0.01). Longissimus muscle area, adjusted fat thickness, and marbling score increased (P0.01) with carcass weight. Bull carcasses showed higher yield but lower quality than those of cows or steers (P0.01). The quality grade of steer carcasses was higher (P0.01) than that of cow carcasses due to higher marbling scores, lower maturity scores, and heavier carcass weights. Hanwoo carcasses with larger longissimus muscle areas in relation to their carcass weight had lower APGS quality grades. The APGS quality grades were different between yield grade A and B carcasses (P0.01), but quality grade was not improved by increased fat thickness beyond the point of yield grade B. Adjusted fat thickness and marbling score showed significant (P0.01) differences among all yield grade classes, and this resulted in increased quality grade as yield grade decreased. Adjusted fat thickness showed the strongest correlation (r = -0.63) with yield grade, whereas marbling score had the strongest correlation (r = 0.81) with quality grade. Results showed a negative effect of castration on yield but a positive effect on quality. Also, data showed that Hanwoo carcasses with heavier weights had higher quality grades than those of lighter weight.
- Published
- 2002
12. Effects of dietary conjugated linoleic acid on fatty acid composition, lipid oxidation, color, and water-holding capacity of pork loin
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S T, Joo, J I, Lee, Y L, Ha, and G B, Park
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Meat ,Food Handling ,Pigmentation ,Swine ,Fatty Acids ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Lipid Metabolism ,Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances ,Linoleic Acid ,Dietary Fats, Unsaturated ,Body Composition ,Animals ,Female ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
The effects of dietary conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) on fatty acid composition, lipid oxidation, and pork quality were investigated. Pigs (n = 20) were fed a diet containing 0, 1, 2.5, or 5% CLA for 4 wk and slaughtered at 105 kg. The longissimus thoracis et lumborum muscle was collected at 24 h postmortem. Pork loin chops (3 cm thick) were packaged aerobically and stored at 4 degrees C for 7 d. Samples were analyzed for ultimate pH, intramuscular fat content, fatty acid composition, thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances, color (L*, a*, b*), and water-holding capacity. Dietary CLA reduced the concentration of linoleic acid and increased CLA concentration in intramuscular fat of pork loin (P0.05). The concentration of CLA in muscle was increased with dietary CLA level and did not change during storage. Thiobarbituric acid-reactive substance value of control was higher than that of the CLA-fed groups (P0.05). Intramuscular fat content was increased by dietary CLA, and less purge loss was observed with samples from CLA-fed pigs (P0.05). Dietary CLA improved the color stability of pork loin during cold storage. After 7 d, lightness (L*) and yellowness (b*) of the 5% CLA-fed group were significantly lower than those of control (P0.05). The results indicated that the water-holding capacity of pork loin was increased with increased intramuscular fat content apparently caused by dietary CLA. Also, the data indicated that color stability of pork was improved with inhibition of lipid oxidation and changing of fatty acid composition by dietary CLA.
- Published
- 2002
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