Cogent Food & Agriculture (Dec 2023)

Composition, fatty acids profile, oxidative stability, and acceptance of meat from broiler chickens fed acerola (Malpighia emarginata) meal-enriched diets

  • Joselaine de Oliveira,
  • Thainá Landim de Barros,
  • Helenice Aparecida Pires,
  • Raquel de Cássia Pereira,
  • Rodrigo Pereira Cassiano,
  • Manoel Garcia-Neto,
  • Elisa Helena Giglio Ponsano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2023.2165012
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1

Abstract

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AbstractThe large production of broilers and fruits in Brazil demands the exploration of new sources of nutrients for the birds and of sustainable disposal of the fruit industrialization wastes. The effects of feeding broiler chickens with residues from acerola industrialization (AM) on meat composition, fatty acids profile, oxidative stability and sensory characteristics were evaluated. Four soybean-corn based diets were tested: negative control, with no antioxidant nor AM; positive control, with butyl hydroxytoluene (BHT) and no AM; and two diets containing either 5 or 7.5% AM and no antioxidant. Official validated methods were used for the chemical and sensorial analyses of the meat. On breast, 7.5% AM increased protein (14.13%) and ash (10.6%) concentrations. On both cuts, AM reduced around 30% the cholesterol levels, decreased saturated fatty acids, increased polyunsaturated fatty acids and reduced n-6:n-3. AM at 5% delayed the onset of lipid peroxidation in frozen stored breasts more than did the antioxidant BHT (36 x 22.5 days). Breasts from treatment containing BHT had the worst sensorial acceptance by consumers. The addition of acerola meal to broiler chickens’ diets revealed a good option to provide healthier meat with longer shelf life, besides representing a way of reducing fruit waste in the environment.

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