4.7 Article

The impact of sous vide braising on the sensory characteristics and heterocyclic amines contents of braised chicken

Journal

LWT-FOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 172, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.lwt.2022.114176

Keywords

Braised chicken; Sous vide braising; Sensory characteristics; Volatile organic compounds; Heterocyclic amines

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2021YFD2100104]
  2. China Agriculture Research System [CARS-41-Z06]
  3. Anhui Natural Science Research Project for Universities [KJ2021A0120]
  4. Science and Technology Project of Nanjing [202212003]
  5. Doctoral Research Initiation Project of Anhui Normal University [752104]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigated the impact of sous vide braising on the sensory characteristics and levels of heterocyclic amines (HAs) in braised chicken. The results showed that sous vide braising increased the water content, reduced cooking loss, and had minimal effects on color and texture. However, the levels of HAs were influenced by the duration of braising.
Braising is the key process in braised chicken production. However, traditional braising also causes quality deterioration and heterocyclic amines (HAs) formation due to over-cooking. In this study, the impact of sous vide braising (SVB) on the sensory characteristics and HAs contents were investigated. The results indicated that SVB significantly enhanced the water content, reduced the cooking loss and impacted the water distribution, while only slightly affected the color and texture. Moreover, SVB faintly affected the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) composition. The differences mainly came from the contents of 1-pentanol, heptanal (monomer), octanal (monomer), n-nonanal (monomer), pentanal (dimer) and three unknown VOCs. While maintaining the tradi-tional sensory qualities, SVB1 samples (75 degrees C 2 h) had lower total HAs content (4.50 +/- 0.64 ng/g), which was 15.6% lower than control (5.33 +/- 0.43 ng/g). However, the total HAs contents in SVB3 (65 degrees C 3 h, 7.61 +/- 0.76 ng/g) and SVB4 (65 degrees C 4 h, 9.57 +/- 0.74 ng/g) samples were significantly higher. The result indicated that even lower braising temperature is not conducive to HAs generation, SVB still cannot effectively reduce the HAs re-sidual contents with the extending duration. Therefore, how to reduce the HAs residual contents in sauce braised meat products effectively remains to be studied.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available