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Original Articles

Tenderness, moisture loss and post-mortem metabolism of broiler Pectoralis muscle from electrically stimulated and air chilled carcases

Pages 622-625 | Published online: 28 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

1. This study was to evaluate the effects of post-mortem electrical stimulation (ES) on carcase moisture loss and on tenderness, R-value and pH of breast fillets following air chilling. 2. In each of 4 replications, 8 birds were electrically stimulated and 12 birds were controls. The ES birds were stimulated at the head in a 1% saline bath (450 V , 0.45 A, 2 s on/1 s off for 7 pulses). After evisceration the carcases were air chilled in a cooler at 1 to 2 C with an average relative humidity of 91% and an air speed of 44 m/min. 3. Breast fillets were harvested at 2 and 4 h postmortem from both ES and control carcases and also at 8 h postmortem from control carcases to determine moisture loss pH and R-value. 4. Although there was no significant effect of ES on shear value at 2 h postmortem, the ES fillets had a lower shear value mean than the control fillets at 4 h postmortem. There was no significant difference between the shear value means of the ES 4 h fillets and the control 8 h fillets. 5. ES accelerated the normal post-mortem decline in pH at both 2 and 4 h postmortem. 6. The R-value means for the control and ES samples were similar 2 h but the R-value mean of the ES samples was greater than the control at 4 h postmortem. 7. The results suggest that, when followed by air chilling, ES accelerates postmortem metabolism, reduces ageing by up to 50%, and has no effect upon evaporative moisture loss.

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