scholarly journals Effect of cattle marketing method on beef quality and palatability

2007 ◽  
Vol 47 (7) ◽  
pp. 774 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. Ferguson ◽  
R. D. Warner ◽  
P. J. Walker ◽  
B. Knee

This study was conducted to determine the effect of direct consignment compared with saleyard marketing on beef quality and palatability. A total of 258 cattle (mean carcass weight 227 ± 19 kg) from nine vendor properties in Victoria, Australia were used. From each vendor group (about 30 cattle/vendor), half were either: (1) processed through a saleyard and then sent to the abattoir or (2) directly consigned to the abattoir. All cattle were slaughtered at the same abattoir and the lairage and postslaughter management of the cattle and their carcasses was standardised. The cattle that had been directly consigned were slaughtered the day after dispatch from the property, whereas saleyard cattle were slaughtered 2 days after dispatch. Striploin (longissimus lumborum) samples were evaluated 1 day postslaughter and after 14 days aging. Overall, marketing method had only a small impact on the various meat quality measures and palatability. A significant vendor × marketing method interaction was found for most traits including muscle glycogen (semimembranosus and semitendinosus), pH (1, 3 and 24 h postslaughter), L*, a* and b* colour values and consumer panel scores [tenderness, flavour and combined score (MQ4)]. Juiciness scores were unaffected by marketing method but were significantly influenced by vendor group (P < 0.001). For MQ4 score, there was a general trend showing that steaks from cattle that had been marketed through the saleyard had marginally lower MQ4 scores than those that had been directly consigned in five of the eight groups. However, this trend was only significant for two of the five groups. A significant three-way interaction between vendor group × marketing method × aging duration was found for shear force (P < 0.001) and cooking loss percentage (P < 0.001). The effect of marketing method on shear force was generally small and not always statistically significant but there was a trend indicating that saleyard marketing resulted in slightly higher shear forces at either 1 or 14 days postslaughter for the majority of the vendor groups. It was concluded that marketing method had a small but variable impact on palatability and meat quality.

2007 ◽  
Vol 47 (7) ◽  
pp. 770 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. Ferguson ◽  
F. D. Shaw ◽  
J. L. Stark

A study involving two groups of feedlot cattle (n = 84 and 112) was undertaken to compare the effect of two preslaughter lairage (L) durations (3 h v. 18 h) on carcass and meat quality properties. The cattle were grainfed for 150 days before slaughter and had a mean carcass weight of 347.0 ± 25.4 kg. Cattle from the same feedlot pen were randomly allocated to the two treatments on the day before slaughter. One group was transported to the abattoir the day before slaughter and held overnight (L–18 h) whereas the other group remained at the feedlot and was transported the following morning and remained in the lairage for 3 h before slaughter (L–3 h). After slaughter, meat quality was evaluated on a subset of 15 carcasses/lairage treatment from the two slaughter groups. Objective meat quality measures were made on unaged and 14-day-aged striploins (longissimus lumborum) from these carcasses. Cattle from the reduced lairage treatment had heavier bled bodyweights at slaughter (P < 0.05) but there was no effect (P > 0.05) on carcass weight, muscle glycogen concentration, pH3h, ultimate pH, shear force or Minolta lightness values. Significant interactions (P < 0.05) between lairage duration and aging were observed for cooking loss percentage and Minolta a* and b* values but these were relatively small in magnitude. There were no differences in the incidence of ingesta contamination or rumen rupture between the lairage treatments. It was concluded that shortening holding times in lairage from 18 to 3 h for cattle that have travelled <6 h would not affect carcass or beef quality.


2001 ◽  
Vol 81 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. Aalhus ◽  
J. A. M. Janz ◽  
A. K. W. Tong ◽  
S. D. M. Jones ◽  
W. M. Robertson

The economic advantages of rapid carcass chilling include reduced cooling time, increased carcass processing rate, and decreased shrink and drip losses; however, it may also reduce subsequent meat tenderness, especially in lean carcasses. The present study examined the effects of blast chilling and electrical stimulation on quality of longissimus lumborum (LL) and semimembranosus muscles from carcasses with a wide range in backfat thickness (0 to 69 mm). Despite promoting a wide range in postmortem pH and temperature decline, backfat thickness had a limited effect on meat quality. There was a decrease in the proportion of carcasses with very high (>35 N cm–2) shear values and a tendency (P = 0.12) for the average shear force to decrease in the LL as backfat depth increased. Unexpectedly, leaner carcasses had less shrink loss than fatter carcasses under blast chill conditions. While blast chilling resulted in slightly darker, tougher meat, electrical stimulation was able to reduce these effects. Neither early postmortem pH nor temperature at 10 h was clearly associated with a pattern in shear force, although high pH10 was associated with tough steaks. Blast chilling in combination with electrical stimulation can be recommended to industry as a means to reduce chilling times and shrink losses while producing meat quality that is as good as, or slightly superior to conventionally cooled carcasses. Key words: Beef quality, blast chilling, electrical stimulation, fat thickness


2018 ◽  
Vol 58 (11) ◽  
pp. 1976 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amalia Simonetti ◽  
Andrea Rando ◽  
Paola Di Gregorio ◽  
Carmelisa Valluzzi ◽  
Annamaria Perna ◽  
...  

The aim of this study was to analyse the polymorphisms in the two promoter regions, P1 and P2, of the porcine Insulin-like Growth Factor 2 (IGF2) gene and to investigate the effect of IGF2 genotypes on meat quality traits in the Italian autochthonous Suino Nero Lucano pig. Three polymorphic sites were analysed and only two of the eight potential haplotypes were observed in the Suino Nero Lucano pig population: A haplotype (–366A – –225G – –182C), and B haplotype (–366G – –225C – –182T). Muscle mass and meat quality characteristics were analysed in 30 castrated pigs (10 for each of the three IGF2 genotypes: A/A, A/B, and B/B). According to the results, B/B animals, at the same carcass weight, showed the highest Longissimus lumborum and Psoas weight (P < 0.05), whereas A/A animals showed a higher intramuscular fat percentage and lower Warner–Bratzler shear force, drip loss, and polyunsaturated fatty acids content. Meat from B/B animals showed also a higher L* value and myoglobin and deoxymyoglobin percentage compared with meat from A/A ones (P < 0.05).


2008 ◽  
Vol 48 (11) ◽  
pp. 1434 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Thompson ◽  
R. Polkinghorne ◽  
M. Porter ◽  
H. M. Burrow ◽  
R. A. Hunter ◽  
...  

The effect of repeated implantation with 20 mg oestradiol-17β (Compudose 100) on carcass and meat quality traits was investigated using 478 Bos indicus and B. indicus × Bos taurus cross steers finished on either pasture or grain to achieve carcass weight for one of three market end points (domestic, 220 kg; Korean, 280 kg; or Japanese, 340 kg). In the oestradiol-17β treatment group, animals were administered implants at ~100-day intervals, with the number of implants administered to any steer ranging from one to eight. Cattle were slaughtered and at boning the anterior portion of the M. longissimus lumborum was removed and frozen after aging for 1 day for later objective meat quality measurements (shear force, compression and cook loss %). The adjoining portion was aged for 14 days before consumer sensory testing using the Meat Standards Australia protocols. Each sample was scored for tenderness, juiciness, like flavour and overall liking by 10 untrained consumers. Implanting increased carcass weights and ossification scores (P < 0.05) and reduced marbling scores in comparison to non-implanted carcasses. For tenderness, like flavour, overall liking and MQ4 scores there was a significant (P < 0.05) interaction between B. indicus content and oestradiol-17β treatment, whereby high B. indicus content cattle that were implanted with oestradiol-17β had the lowest sensory scores. The number of implants administered did not affect carcass weights or marbling scores, whereas ossification scores increased in carcasses as the number of implants increased. The number of implants administered had no effect (P > 0.05) on sensory scores, or objective meat tenderness.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Derico Setyabrata ◽  
Siwen Xue ◽  
Kelly R Vierck ◽  
Jerrad F. Legako ◽  
Paul Ebner ◽  
...  

The objective of this study was to determine the effect of various dry-aging methods on meat quality and palatability attributes of cull cow beef loins. Paired bone-in loins (M. longissimus lumborum) from 13 cull cow carcasses (Holstein, 42+ mo) were obtained at 5d postmortem, divided into four equal sections and randomly assigned into 4 aging methods (wet-aging [WA], conventional dry-aging [DA], dry-aging in water permeable bag [DWA], and UV-light dry-aging [UDA]). The beef sections were aged for 28d at 2°C, 65% relative humidity and 0.8 m/s airflow. Following aging, surface crusts and bones were removed and loin samples were collected for the meat quality, microbiological and sensory analyses.Results indicated that all dry-aged loins had greater moistureand trimming loss compared to WA (P&lt;0.05), while DWA had lower loss than DA and UDA (P&lt;0.05). No differences in shear force, cook loss and both lipid and protein oxidation across all treatments were observed (P&gt;0.05). Among all treatments, DWA exhibited the least color stability indicated by rapid discoloration observed in the sample, while UDA had color attributes comparable to WA throughout the whole display. Microbial analysis indicated that UDA had lower microbial concentration on the surface than the other samples (P&lt;0.05). The consumer panel analysis found that all loins were acceptable and the trained panel analysis indicated that DA loins had lower sour and fatty flavor attributes compared to WA (P&lt;0.05). The results indicate that dry-aging can potentially be utilized as the effective natural process to improve cull cow beef palatability without compromising other meat quality attributes or microbiological shelf-life.


2016 ◽  
Vol Volume 112 (Number 7/8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda Y. Chulayo ◽  
Voster Muchenje ◽  
◽  
◽  

Abstract The objective of the study was to determine the effects of animal class and genotype of cattle on Muscularis longissimus thoracis et lumborum (LTL) nanostructure, ultimate pH (pHu), colour and tenderness of beef. We found significant positive relationships between distance travelled (DT) and meat temperature (Tm) (p less than 0.01); lairage duration (LDhr) and lightness of colour (L*) (p less than 0.01); ambient temperature (Ta) and L* (p less than 0.05) and LDhr and yellowness (b*) (p less than 0.05) of beef from Bonsmara cattle. Positive linear relationships were observed between DT and Tm (p less than 0.05) and DT and L* (p less than 0.01) of the non-descript cattle. There were no significant relationships between pre-slaughter stress and other beef quality parameters (pHu, Warner– Bratzler shear force [WBSF], redness [a*] and b*) of Bonsmara, Nguni and non-descript cattle. Muscle fibres differed among class and genotype and had an effect on meat quality. The Bonsmara, non-descript and Nguni cows and heifers had visible skeletal muscle fibres which were thin and long, promising improved tenderness of beef. Genotype and class had significant effects on meat quality parameters (Tm, pHu, L*, a*, b* and WBSF). The first important principal components as they appeared from the analysis were pHu, Tm, L*, a*, b* and WBSF. Therefore, animal class did not affect the nanostructure of beef; instead, meat tenderness was enhanced by the longer and visible muscle fibres. Nguni cattle produced meat of superior quality to that of the Bonsmara and the non-descript cattle.


1996 ◽  
Vol 76 (4) ◽  
pp. 517-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. S. K. Yambayamba ◽  
M. A. Price ◽  
J. L. Aalhus ◽  
S. D. M. Jones

Twenty-four Hereford crossbred heifers weighing 222 kg (22 kg SD) and aged 226 d (13 d SD) on day 0 were used to investigate the effects of feed restriction (period 1) followed by realimentation (period 2) on hepatic and longissimus muscle glycogen metabolites and meat quality. The heifers were randomly assigned in equal numbers to either ad libitum feeding (ADLIB) or maintenance feeding for 92 d followed by realimentation (REST), and serially slaughtered over a wide range of liveweights (200–460 kg). The concentrations of glycogen, its metabolites, and the total glucidic potential (GP) were determined from portions of the caudate lobe of the liver and the longissimus lumborum (LL) muscle. Meat quality assessment of the longissimus thoracis (LT) was done by objective means. Hepatic glycogen concentration was lower (P = 0.05) in REST than in ADLIB heifers, and GP tended to show a similar pattern (P = 0.07). There were no significant differences in the concentrations of glycogen or its metabolites in the LL of REST compared with ADLIB heifers. However, the heifers slaughtered during period 1 had lower muscle glycogen (P = 0.04) and higher lactate (P < 0.01) concentrations than those slaughtered during period 2. REST heifers had lighter slaughter weights resulting in smaller ribeye areas (P = 0.03), lower intramuscular fat concentration (P < 0.01) and higher moisture content (P < 0.01). Independent of slaughter weight, REST heifers had higher drip loss (P = 0.05) and lower L * (P = 0.01) than ADLIB heifers. These results suggest that feed restriction affects hepatic glycogen reserves and also has minor effects on meat quality traits in beef heifers. However, there was no indication that meat from REST heifers had severe quality defects such as DFD (dark, firm, dry) meat. Key words: Feed restriction, realimentation, longissimus muscle, liver, glucidic potential, meat quality


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob R. Tuell ◽  
Yu Qianqian ◽  
Brad Kim

Tumbling of intact muscle foods has been widely applied toprocessed meats using brine solution. However, the use of tumbling withoutbrine on fresh beef muscles has not been fully examined. Therefore, this studyaimed to evaluate fresh beef tumbling on meat quality and proteolytic featuresof loin (longissimus lumborum)muscles. Moreover, interactions with the duration of postmortem aging wereinvestigated. Loins (n=9) at 7d postmortem were sectioned and allocated among twotumbling (T) treatment groups at 60 (T60) or 90 (T90) minutes, as well as a non-tumbledcontrol (T0) group. After treatment, sub-sections were made and divided among0d, 7d, or 14d of further aging. Meat quality was assessed by shear forcevalues, water-holding ability, and color attributes. The extent of proteolysiswas determined by quantification of desmin and troponin-T, myofibrilfragmentation index (MFI), and transmission electron microscopy. An interactionbetween fresh beef tumbling and aging duration was observed in shear forcevalues (P=0.032). At 0d, muscles fromT90 exhibited lower shear force (21.6 N) compared to T0 (34.8 N) and T60 (24.7N) groups. Muscles from T60 and T90 groups maintained lower shear force than T0controls at each respective aging duration.Higher cooking loss (P=0.011) but notpurge loss (P=0.412) was observed in theT60 and T90 groups compared to T0. Shear force results were supported by higherMFI in T60 and T90 groups than T0 controls (P&lt;0.001), as well as the disappearance of intact troponin-T withfurther aging (P=0.009). Transmissionelectron microscopy supported increased initial tenderness would owe primarily tophysical disruptions to myofibrillar structure, though fresh beef tumbling may facilitateproteolysis with further aging.


2020 ◽  
Vol 33 (10) ◽  
pp. 1642-1655
Author(s):  
Prabhu Balan ◽  
Mustafa M. Farouk ◽  
Maryann Staincliffe ◽  
Adam D Stuart ◽  
Robert Kemp ◽  
...  

Objective: The aim of this study is to characterize the impact of additional electrical stimulation (AES) and various pre-rigor holding temperatures (for 3 h) on the ageing-potential of hot boned bovine M. longissimus lumborum (LL).Methods: Paired LL loins from 12 bulls were hot-boned within 40 min of slaughter, immediate AES applied and subjected to various holding temperatures (5°C, 15°C, 25°C, and 35°C) for 3 h.Results: AES did not accelerate the rate of rigor attainment, but the 3 h pre-rigor holding temperature did. Shear force values decreased as the pre-rigor holding temperatures increased. AES and holding for 3 h (at 25°C) resulted in higher water-holding capacity.Conclusion: Data confirmed that AES did not influence the various meat quality parameters in the present study, but pre-rigor holding temperature (25°C) alone or in combination with AES resulted in superior meat quality.


2019 ◽  
Vol 59 (9) ◽  
pp. 1752 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. M. Della Rosa ◽  
E. Pavan ◽  
S. Maresca ◽  
M. Spetter ◽  
F. Ramiro

To evaluate the effect of grazing cattle temperament on performance, as well as carcass and meat quality traits, exit velocity (EV) was assessed throughout two production cycles (PC1, n = 38 and PC2, n = 52). Individual EV determinations were assessed throughout each PC and then 100-days period averages were calculated for each animal. Animals were ranked based on their EV (EV-RANK) in the first 100-days period as SLOW, FAST and MEDIUM. The EV decreased from weaning to slaughter in FAST and MEDIUM (P &lt; 0.05); but did not change in SLOW (P &gt; 0.10). Initial liveweight was lowest in FAST and highest in MEDIUM (P = 0.03). DM intake (P = 0.08) and average daily gain (P = 0.94) were not affected by EV-RANK, but carcass subcutaneous fat thickness was lowest in FAST and highest in MEDIUM (P = 0.02). Longissimus muscle colour and shear-force were not affected by EV-RANK (P &gt; 0.05), but muscle glycogen content at slaughter was higher in MEDIUM than in SLOW or FAST (P = 0.047). No EV-RANK effects were observed in the present study on meat colour and shear-force. However, its effects on subcutaneous fat thickness and muscle glycogen could result in low meat quality of temperamental cattle under more stressful handling situations.


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