Foods (Mar 2023)

Effects of Animal Fat Replacement by Emulsified Melon and Pumpkin Seed Oils in Deer Burgers

  • Elena Martínez,
  • José E. Pardo,
  • Adrián Rabadán,
  • Manuel Álvarez-Ortí

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/foods12061279
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. 1279

Abstract

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Meat products such as burgers contain large amounts of saturated fat and are considered unhealthy foods by a society that is increasingly aware of the impact of food on their health, as there is a widespread idea that the consumption of large amounts of saturated fats is related to cardiovascular diseases, some types of cancer and obesity. The main goal of this study was to reformulate deer burgers by replacing the saturated fat from its composition with emulsions of oil extracted from melon and pumpkin seeds. Three emulsions were made with these oils (guar gum and inulin, sodium alginate and maltodextrin) to obtain a solid texture. Then, burgers were elaborated, using the vegetable oil emulsions to replace partially (50%) or totally (100%) the animal fat usually used in their elaboration. Physical parameters such as color and texture, consumer evaluation, proximate analysis and the fatty acid composition obtained by gas chromatography were analyzed. The burgers made with emulsified oils showed a higher weight loss, but with a minor loss of caliber and hardness (p p < 0.05). The inclusion of emulsified melon and pumpkin oil in deer burgers leads to an increase in the content of polyunsaturated fatty acids in burgers that, although they showed small differences in texture attributes (especially hardness and cohesiveness), were well valued by consumer judges in all sensory attributes evaluated.

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