Meat tenderness
Tenderness is a quality of meat gauging how easily it is chewed or cut. Tenderness is a desirable quality, as tender meat is softer, easier to chew, and generally more palatable than harder meat. Consequently, tender cuts of meat typically command higher prices. The tenderness depends on a number of factors including the meat grain, the amount of connective tissue, and the amount of fat.[1] Tenderness can be increased by a number of processing techniques, generally referred to as tenderizing or tenderization.
Influencing factors
[edit | edit source]Tenderness is perhaps the most important of all factors impacting meat eating quality, with others being flavor, juiciness, and succulence.[2]
Tenderness is a quality complex to obtain and gauge, and it depends on a number of factors. On the basic level, these factors are meat grain, the amount and composition of connective tissue, and the amount of fat.[1] In order to obtain a tender meat, there is a complex interplay between the animal's pasture, age, species, breed, protein intake, calcium status, stress before and at killing, and how the meat is treated after slaughter.[3]
Meat with the fat content deposited within the steak to create a marbled appearance has always been regarded as more tender than steaks where the fat is in a separate layer.[3] Cooking causes melting of the fat, spreading it throughout the meat and increasing the tenderness of the final product.[1]
Testing
[edit | edit source]The meat industry strives to produce meat with standardized and guaranteed tenderness, since these characteristics are sought for by the consumers.[4] For that purpose a number of objective tests of tenderness have been developed, gauging meat resistance to shear force, most commonly used being Slice Shear Force test[5] and Warner–Bratzler Shear Force test.[6]
Tenderizing
[edit | edit source]Techniques for breaking down collagens in meat to make it more palatable and tender are referred to as tenderizing or tenderization.
There are a number of ways to tenderize meat:
- Mechanical tenderization, such as pounding[7] or piercing.[7]
- The tenderization that occurs through cooking, such as braising.[8]
- Tenderizers in the form of naturally occurring enzymes known as proteases, which can be added to food before cooking.[7][9]
- Marinating the meat with vinegar, wine, lemon juice, buttermilk or yogurt.[7]
- Brining the meat in a salt solution (brine).[7]
- Dry aging of meat at 0 to 2 °C (32 to 36 °F).[8]
- Velveting
- Sodium bicarbonate[12]
Research
[edit | edit source]Efforts have been made since at least 1970 to use explosives to tenderize meat and a company was founded to try to commercialize the process; as of 2011 it was not yet scalable.[13]
References
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External links
[edit | edit source]- Improving Meat Tenderness by John Marchello and Ron Allen File:Dokuwiki ppt.png PPT (5 MB)