• Title/Summary/Keyword: pork jerky

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Investigation of Quality Properties of Commercial Jerky from Korean Market for Establishment of Quality Parameters (품질기준설정을 위한 국내 시판 육포의 품질 특성 조사)

  • Park, Sunhyun;Shim, You-Shin;Jeong, Seongweon;Lee, Hyun Sung;Kim, Jong-Chan
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.26 no.3
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    • pp.230-236
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    • 2016
  • The study was carried out to evaluate the quality of commercial pork and beef jerky at a market in Korea. The amount of food additives, place of origin, meat content, microbiological and physicochemical characteristics were investigated in 46 different jerky samples. Meat contents of pork and beef jerky were 75.2~94.0% and 80.0~95.6%, respectively. Food additives, including sodium nitrite, potassium sorbate, and sodium erythorbate were mainly used in jerky. Pork jerky was processed from domestic pork, and beef jerky was mostly processed from imported beef from the USA, Australia, or New Zealand. Pork jerky contained $23.82{\pm}5.74%$ moisture, $37.86{\pm}7.05%$ crude protein, $6.16{\pm}4.91%$ crude fat, and $4.6.87{\pm}1.76%$ crude ash. Beef jerky contained $26.64{\pm}5.21%$ moisture, $41.36{\pm}3.50%$ crude protein, $4.67{\pm}3.46%$ crude fat, and $7.21{\pm}1.91%$ crude ash. Water activity (Aw) of pork jerky was $0.73{\pm}0.09$ while that of beef jerky was $0.78{\pm}0.08$. Volatile basic nitrogen (VBN) content to jerky was 7.1~36.0 mg/100 g. There was no significant difference in the physicochemical composition of meat type (p<0.05). Coliform, Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus were not detected in pork or beef jerky, whereas yeast and molds were detected below $1.2{\times}10^1CFU/g$ in beef jerky samples.

Effect of Gamma-irradiation on the Quality Properties of Pork Jerky Prepared with Paprika and Japanese Apricot Extracts (감마선 조사가 파프리카와 매실 추출물로 제조된 돈육포의 품질특성에 미치는 영향)

  • Park, Kyung-Sook
    • Journal of Radiation Industry
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    • v.5 no.4
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    • pp.383-391
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    • 2011
  • This study was conducted to investigate the applicability of gamma irradiation for improving the quality of paprika and Japanese apricot extract-treated nitrite free pork jerky. Pork jerky was gamma-irradiated at 0, 3, 5, 7 and 10 kGy and physiochemical properties such as proximate composition, 2-thiobarbituric acid (TBARS) values, color stability, texture, and sensory property were then evaluated. The results showed that the treatment of paprika and Japanese apricot extract to the pork jerky increased Hunter color value and texture property and at the same time decreased TBARS values. When gamma irradiated, natural pigment extract-treated pork jerky did not produce any change in its proximate composition (moisture, crude protein, crude lipid contents), and TBARS values. However, the redness (a-value) of pork jerky increased as the irradiation dose increased, whereas shear force of pork jerky was decreased. Sensory result showed that gamma irradiation induced to decrease the sensory scores. Therefore, these results suggest that gamma irradiation and the addition of paprika and Japanese apricot extracts could be an effective mean to improve color and texture of restructured pork jerky without use of nitrite.

Determination of Quality Changes throughout Process ing Steps in Chinese-style Pork Jerky

  • Chen, W.S.;Liu, D.C.;Chen, M.T.
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
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    • v.17 no.5
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    • pp.700-704
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    • 2004
  • Chinese-style pork jerky is a typical intermediate moisture meat product obtained by curing, drying and roasting pork samples. The chemical, physical and microbiological characteristics of pork jerky were evaluated throughout processing. The moisture content varied from 72.5% to 23.4 or 19.6% and aw varied form 0.97 to 0.74 or 0.72 in accordance with processing steps. The pork jerky roasted at $200^{\circ}C$ had higher shear value than roasted at $150^{\circ}C$ because the moisture content and aw of the former sample was lower than the later sample. The nitrite losses during whole processing steps amount to nearly 50%. The TBA value of pork jerky varied from 0.34 to 9.25 or 9.83 mg of malonaldehyde depended on processing steps. The VBN value of pork jerky ranging from 0.25 to 22.4 or 23.5 mg/kg depended upon processing steps. The ATPase activity of myofibrillar proteins during processing steps were partly or entirely denatured by the heat-drying or heat-roasting treatment. A gradual decrease in microorganism count during processing of pork jerky was also observed.

Effects of High Level of Sucrose on the Moisture Content, Water Activity, Protein Denaturation and Sensory Properties in Chinese-Style Pork Jerky

  • Chen, W.S.;Liu, D.C.;Chen, M.T.
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
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    • v.15 no.4
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    • pp.585-590
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    • 2002
  • The effects of a high level of sucrose on the moisture content, water activity, protein denaturation and sensory properties in Chinese-style pork jerky were investigated. The pork jerky with different levels (0, 12, 15, 18 and 21%) of sucrose was prepared. Fifteen frozen boneless pork legs from different animals were used in this trial. Sucrose is a non-reducing disaccharides and would not undergo non-enzymatic browning. Some studies pointed out that sucrose might be hydrolyzed during freezing, dehydration and storage into glucose and fructose, and cause non-enzymatic browning in meat products. The results showed that moisture content and water activity of pork jerky decreased with increase of the level of sucrose. At the same time, shear value was increased due to the reduced moisture content and water activity by osmotic dehydration. However, a higher level of sucrose had a significantly negative effect on protein solubility and extractability of myosin heavy chain of pork jerky due to non-enzymatic browning. From the results of sensory panel tests, the pork jerky with 21% of sucrose seems to be more acceptable by the panelists in hardness, sweetness and overall acceptability.

Effects of Salt Concentration and Drying Time on the Quality Characteristics of Pork Jerky during Dehydration

  • Yang, Han-Sul;Kang, Sung-Won;Joo, Seon-Tea;Choi, Sung-Gil
    • Food Science of Animal Resources
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    • v.32 no.3
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    • pp.285-292
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    • 2012
  • This study was conducted in order to evaluate the effects of brine pre-soaking at different concentrations and drying time on the quality characteristics of pork jerky. The physicochemical properties of pork jerky including final moisture content, water activity ($a_w$), shear force, microstructure, and thiobarbituric acid reactive substance (TBARS) values were investigated. The sensory attributes of pork jerky were evaluated and used as parameters for determining the optimum drying condition. The sliced pork samples were pre-soaked at salt concentrations ranging from 0 to 10% for 3 h and then dried at $70^{\circ}C$ for up to 10 h. The pre-soaked samples in the salt solution showed higher final moisture content than the control sample after drying for 10 h. The final moisture content of pork jerky increased with increasing salt concentrations. On the other hand, the water activity with regards to the pre-soaked samples in a 10% salt solution showed the lowest value for up to 8 h drying. The shear force values of pork jerky decreased with increasing salt concentration while the TBARS values of the samples increased with increasing salt concentrations. Sensory evaluation suggested that the color, flavor, juiciness, and tenderness of the pork jerky samples were improved by pre-soaking in a 2% salt solution and the highest likeability score of pork jerky among the samples were obtained by pre-soaking in a 2% salt solution prior to drying.

Combined effects of electron beam irradiation and addition of onion peel extracts and flavoring on microbial and sensorial quality of pork jerky (전자선 조사와 양파껍질 추출물 및 향미물질 첨가가 돈육포의 미생물학적 및 관능적 품질에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Hyun-Joo;Kang, Mingu;Jo, Cheorun
    • Korean Journal of Agricultural Science
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    • v.39 no.3
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    • pp.341-347
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    • 2012
  • The objective of this study was to investigate the combined effect of electron beam irradiation (EB) and onion peel extracts and selected flavorings on microbiological and sensory quality of pork jerky. Total aerobic bacteria were detected in the range of $3.87{\pm}0.30{\sim}4.60{\pm}0.12$ log CFU/g in all samples. Addition of both onion peel extract and flavoring showed the decrease of total aerobic bacterial count in pork jerky. No viable cells were observed after EB at 4 kGy. Sensory evaluation indicated that the EB-treated pork jerky with 0.5% barbecue flavoring did not show any difference in overall acceptability compared with the control. Therefore, combined use of EB with onion peel extracts and barbecue flavoring may enhance the safety of pork jerky with proper sensory quality.

Optimization of Drying Temperature and Time for Pork Jerky Using Response Surface Methodology

  • Yang, Han-Sul;Kang, Sung-Won;Jeong, Jin-Yeon;Chun, Ji-Yeon;Joo, Seon-Tea;Park, Gu-Boo;Choi, Sung-Gil
    • Food Science and Biotechnology
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    • v.18 no.4
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    • pp.985-990
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    • 2009
  • Response surface methodology (RSM) was applied to determine the optimum drying conditions for pork jerky. The physicochemical properties of pork jerky, such as final moisture content, water activity (Aw), pH, and shear force were investigated. In addition, sensory characteristics of pork jerky were evaluated and were used as a parameter for determining the optimum condition. Pork jerky samples were dried at different temperatures between 40 to $80^{\circ}C$ for the time ranged from 0 to 10 hr. The predicted values for moisture content, Aw, and shear force of dried pork samples were in good agreement with the experimental values with correlation coefficients ($R^2$) of 0.95, 0.96, and 0.97, respectively. Both drying temperature and time significantly (p<0.01) affected moisture content, Aw, pH, and shear force and their interactions were also significant at p<0.01 except for Aw. RSM showed the optimum drying conditions for pork jerky, based on moisture content, shear force, and sensory evaluation to be oC$65-70^{\circ}C$ for 7-8 hr.

A Evaluation of Quality of the Marketing Jerky in Domestic - 1. Investigation of Outward Additives, Food Additives, Nutrient Content and Sanitary State - (국내 시판 육포류의 품질평가 - 외형, 식품첨가물, 영양조성분 및 위생적인 상태 조사 -)

  • 양철영;이수한
    • The Korean Journal of Food And Nutrition
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    • v.15 no.3
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    • pp.197-202
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    • 2002
  • This study was carried out to investigate food additives, physico-chemical, sanitary state of the marketing jerky in domestic. The kind of sensory agents and food additives on the marketing jerky sample used 16~23 kinds, and the domestic processed by import beef was large number, but that domestic pork jerky was small number The moisture content on the import beef jerky were high, and crude protein on the import beef jerky and domestic pork jerky were high level, and crude fat on the domestic pork jerky were high, but crude ash on all jerky sample were similar level. Degree of saline on the import beef jerky was high, but the domestic beef jerky was low. The range of pH was 5.41~6.11, and that import beef jerky was little high, but the domestic beef jerky was low. Water activity value in pork jerky was 0.743, also had high, and domestic beef jerky was lowest than others jerky sample. Range of VBN value in jerky sample was 9.98~12.36mg%, and the range TBA value was 0.239~0.367, and that value showed difference in all jerky sample. The total general bacteria count of marketing jerky was 10$^3$~ 10$^4$ CFU/g, and import beef jerky was less higher than domestic beef and pork jerky.

A Evaluation of Quality of the Marketing Jerky in Domestic - 1. Investigation of Outward Additives, Food Additives, Nutrient Content and Sanitary State - (국내 시판 육포류의 품질평가 - 외형, 식품첨가물, 영양조성분 및 위생적인 상태 조사 -)

  • 양철영;이수한
    • The Korean Journal of Food And Nutrition
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    • v.15 no.3
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    • pp.167-202
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    • 2002
  • This study was carried out to investigate food additives, physico-chemical, sanitary state of the marketing jerky in domestic. The kind of sensory agents and food additives on the marketing jerky sample used 16~23 kinds, and the domestic processed by import beef was large number, but that domestic pork jerky was small number The moisture content on the import beef jerky were high, and crude protein on the import beef jerky and domestic pork jerky were high level, and crude fat on the domestic pork jerky were high, but crude ash on all jerky sample were similar level. Degree of saline on the import beef jerky was high, but the domestic beef jerky was low. The range of pH was 5.41~6.11, and that import beef jerky was little high, but the domestic beef jerky was low. Water activity value in pork jerky was 0.743, also had high, and domestic beef jerky was lowest than others jerky sample. Range of VBN value in jerky sample was 9.98~12.36mg%, and the range TBA value was 0.239~0.367, and that value showed difference in all jerky sample. The total general bacteria count of marketing jerky was 10$^3$~ 10$^4$ CFU/g, and import beef jerky was less higher than domestic beef and pork jerky.

The Effect of Roasting Temperature on the Formation of Volatile Compounds in Chinese-Style Pork Jerky

  • Chen, W.S.;Liu, D.C.;Chen, M.T.
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
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    • v.15 no.3
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    • pp.427-431
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    • 2002
  • The purpose of this work was to study the effect of roasting temperature on the production of volatile compounds in Chinese-style pork jerky. The pork jerky was roasted by far-infrared grill at $150^{\circ}C$ or $200^{\circ}C$ for 5 min. The analysis of volatile compounds using a Likens-Nickerson apparatus coupled to a gas chromatograph and a mass spectrometer enabled us to identify 21 volatile compounds. The results showed that the volatile compounds coming from pork jerky can be divided into two groups in accordance with their possible origins. The first group of volatile compounds derived from oxidation of lipid included hexanal, ethylbenzene, nonanal, benzaldehyde, 2,4-decadienal, 1-octen-3-ol, octadecanal, and 9-octadecenal. The second group of volatile compounds generated from degradation of natural spices included 1,8-cinene, 4-terpineol, ${\alpha}$-terpineol, e-anethole, methyl-eugenol, panisaldehyde, elemol, eugenol, methyl-isoeugenol and myristicin. Significant differences (p<0.05) were found between 2 different roasted temperatures at levels for all volatile compounds.