4.7 Article

Effects of Modified Atmosphere Packaging with Different Gas Ratios on the Quality Changes of Golden Pompano (Trachinotus ovatus) Fillets during Superchilling Storage

Journal

FOODS
Volume 11, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods11131943

Keywords

Trachinotus ovatus; golden pompano; modified atmosphere packaging; superchilling storage; physicochemical properties; principal component analysis

Funding

  1. Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences [2020TD69]
  2. China Agriculture Research System [CARS-47, SKJC-202002-013]
  3. Special Funds for Promoting Economic Development in Guangdong Province (For Modern Fishery) [YueNong 2019B14]

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The quality changes of golden pompano fillets under air packaging and modified atmosphere packaging were evaluated. The results showed that MAP effectively suppressed quality deterioration, with the best results found in MAP with 70% CO2/30% N-2. Principal component analysis revealed that microbial proliferation, protein hydrolysis, and oxidation were the critical indicators of fillet quality deterioration.
The quality changes of golden pompano fillets in air packaging (AP) and modified atmosphere packaging (MAP) with 30% CO2/70% N-2, 50% CO2/50% N-2, and 70% CO2/30% N-2 were evaluated under superchilling (-3 degrees C). The results showed that the whiteness of fillets decreased during storage. The rate of pH increase of MAP was significantly slower than in AP groups, in which MAP with 70% CO2/30% N-2 effectively suppressed the PH. Interestingly, the hardness decreased on day five following the treatments, followed by a relatively stationary trend. MAP could greatly suppress the increase of total volatile basic nitrogen (TVB-N) contents of fillets compared to fillets packed in AP. All MAP groups of fillets maintained first-grade freshness throughout storage, while the AP samples decreased to second-grade freshness on about the 25th day. MAP with 70% CO2/30% N-2 and MAP with 50% CO2/50% N-2 had the best results in inhibiting protein degeneration and explanation. Unexpectedly, drip loss of fillets in MAP far exceeded the AP group during storage, which causes sensory discomfort. Anaerobic plate count (APC) of fillets in AP exceeded the consumption limit of 6.7 log CFU/g on day 26 (6.75 log CFU/g on the 26th day), whereas the MAP was still microbiologically acceptable after 30 days of storage (6.43, 6.41, 6.22 log CFU/g, respectively). Considering physicochemical and microbiological parameters, the shelf life of fillets packed in AP was 25 days. MAP treatments could prolong the shelf life of fillets by similar to 4-5 days compared to AP. Overall, MAP with 70% CO2/30% N-2 gas ratio was best for inhibiting the quality deterioration of fillets. Furthermore, principal component analysis (PCA) was performed to evaluate the critical indicators of quality deterioration of the fillets. Two principal components were determined by dimensionality reduction, in which the contribution of the first principal component was centrifugal loss > hardness > TVB-N > APC > CO2 solubility > TBARs > drip loss > pH, which mainly reflected the degree of microbial proliferation, protein hydrolysis, and oxidation. The contribution of the second principal component was pH > TBRAs > drip loss > APC > CO2 solubility > TVB-N > hardness > centrifugal loss, indicating a high correlation between lipid oxidation and microbial proliferation index.

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