Foods (Mar 2023)

Chinese Consumer Assessment of Australian Sheep Meat Using a Traditional Hotpot Cooking Method

  • Rachel A. O’Reilly,
  • Liping Zhao,
  • Graham E. Gardner,
  • Hailing Luo,
  • Qingxiang Meng,
  • David W. Pethick,
  • Liselotte Pannier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/foods12051109
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
p. 1109

Abstract

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Hotpot is a widely popular cooking method for sheepmeat in China. This study measured the sensory responses of 720 untrained Chinese consumers to Australian sheepmeat cooked using a hotpot technique with methods based on Meat Standards Australia protocols. Shoulder and leg cuts of 108 lambs and 109 yearlings were scored on tenderness, juiciness, flavour and overall liking with linear mixed effects models used to analyse the influence of muscle type and animal factors on these scores. On average, shoulder cuts were more palatable than legs cuts for all sensory traits (p p p < 0.05), with greater palatability for both cuts as intramuscular fat increased (range 2.5 to 7.5%), and muscularity decreased (as measured through loin weight adjusted for hot carcase weight). Consumers were unable to detect differences between animal sire type and sex in sheepmeat hotpot. These findings suggest shoulder and leg cuts performed comparatively well in hotpot compared to previously tested sheepmeat cooking methods and emphasise the importance of balanced selection for quality and yield traits to ensure that consumer satisfaction is maintained.

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