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Microwave heating and conduction heating pork belly: Non-volatile compounds and their correlation with taste characteristics, heat transfer modes, and matrix microstructure.

Authors :
Wang, Xingwei
Feng, Tingting
Wang, Xuejiao
Xia, Shuqin
Yu, Jingyang
Zhang, Xiaoming
Source :
Meat Science. Oct2022, Vol. 192, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

This study investigated the difference in the taste characteristics of pork belly cooked by traditional pan-heating (TH), microwave heating (MH), and microwave combined with conduction heating (MH + CH). The results showed that MH destroyed the microstructure integrity and made the cooking loss (50.33%) and sodium ion concentration (10.8 mg/g) about 1.6 times that of MH + CH, thereby enhancing the saltiness. In addition, compared with TH, microwave heating could accelerate the hydrolysis of proteins and the thermal degradation of ribonucleotides, resulting in higher contents of free amino acids (880.71 and 714.85 mg/100 g) and nucleotides (181.41 and 145.52 mg/100 g) in MH and MH + CH. Combined with the results of non-volatile compounds and sensory evaluation, the MH + CH not only promoted the accumulation but also improved the dissolution uniformity of taste compounds, which enhanced the sensory umami. The inconsistency between non-volatile compounds, electronic tongue, and sensory evaluation indicated that the matrix effects caused by cooking also had significant influences on the taste quality of solid samples. [Display omitted] • The heating modes significantly affected the taste characteristics of pork belly. • Taste profile of microwave combined with conduction heating was closer to tradition. • Microwave heating enhanced the formation of non-volatile taste compounds. • Microstructure of solid matrix affected the dissolution uniformity of taste compounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03091740
Volume :
192
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Meat Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
158369173
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.meatsci.2022.108899