Journal
JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE
Volume 71, Issue 7, Pages S542-S546Publisher
BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1111/j.1750-3841.2006.00124.x
Keywords
beef; collagen; consumer; forage; tenderness
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Twenty-six crossbred steers were finished either on ryegrass(Lolium multiflorum Lam.) forage (FOR, n=13) or a primarily gain diet containing 85% corn, 7.5% cotton-seed hulls, and 7.5% vitamin/mineral/urea supplement (GRAIN, n = 13) to determine the cotsumer acceptance of forage- and grain-finished beef in 3 southeastern states. Shear force values were not affected by finishing-treatment (P=0.62), and both, total and heat-labile collagen content means of the FOR and GRAIN steaks were similar (P=0.88 and 0.14, respectivly). Ribeye steaks were cut from wholesale roasts after 14d of aging and were evaluated by 1250 consumers in a retail study and 87 consumers in a take-home study across Alabama, Tennessee, and Kentucky. Retail consumers rated GRAIN steaks higher for flavor (P=0.001), overall palatability (P=0.001) and price per kg (P=0.001) compared to FOR steaks, but consumers in the take-home study found no differences in any of the 3 traits. Consumers-that preferred FOR steaks were willing to pay an average of $2.38kg and $5.61/kg more for FOR steaks than for GRAIN, steaks in the retail and take-home, studies, respectively (P=0.001), Among consumers survayed across all 3 states, 34.1% of retail consumers and 54.0% of take-home consumers preferred FOR steaks. At least one-third of the consumers surveyed preferred the taste of forage-finished beef and were willing to pay a premium.
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