Foods (Jun 2020)

Differentiating Breast Myopathies through Color and Texture Analyses in Broiler

  • María del Mar Campo,
  • Leticia Mur,
  • Ana Guerrero,
  • Marta Barahona,
  • Virginia Celia Resconi,
  • Danielle Rodrigues Magalhaes,
  • Eduardo Lisbinski,
  • Bruna Boito,
  • Ivanna Moraes de Oliveira,
  • José Luis Olleta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9060824
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. 824

Abstract

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Wooden breast (WB), white striping (WS) and spaghetti meat (SM) are breast myopathies of the Pectoralis major that greatly affect meat quality in broilers. To differentiate color and texture characteristics with instrumental methods, some of them applied for the first time in this species, 300 carcasses were randomly chosen from an abattoir from five different flocks from the same farm, at a rate of 60 carcasses from each flock. Twenty-four hours after slaughter, both side breasts were dissected, and yields calculated. Color was measured on the surface of the breast with a spectrocolorimeter and reflectance values obtained. Texture was measured on raw meat with a modified compression test that hinders the fiber from expanding transversally and a texture profile analysis (TPA) and also on cooked meat with a Warner–Bratzler shear and a TPA. Color differs between severity degrees, increasing redness (from −1.77 to −1.32 in WB) and, especially, yellowness (from 5.00 to 6.73 in WS) and chroma (from 5.75 to 7.22 in SM) with the severity of the myopathy. The subtraction R630 minus R580 was found to be a useful index to differentiate breast myopathies degrees. The modified compression test can be considered an effective tool to assess the hardness of different structures in each myopathy. Texture differences in the myopathies are better assessed in raw than in cooked meat.

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