Characterization of the Non-Volatiles and Volatiles in Correlation with Flavor Development of Cooked Goat Meat as Affected by Different Cooking Methods

Thai-Native×Anglo-Nubian goat meat cooked by grilling (GR), sous vide (SV), and microwave (MW), was compared to fresh meat (Raw) in terms of flavor development. Non-volatile [i.e., free amino acids, nucleotide-related compounds, taste active values (TAVs) and umami equivalency, sugars, lipid oxidati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food science of animal resources 2024, 44(3), , pp.662-683
Hauptverfasser: Indriani, Sylvia, Srisakultiew, Nattanan, Sangsawad, Papungkorn, Paengkoum, Pramote, Pongsetkul, Jaksuma
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Thai-Native×Anglo-Nubian goat meat cooked by grilling (GR), sous vide (SV), and microwave (MW), was compared to fresh meat (Raw) in terms of flavor development. Non-volatile [i.e., free amino acids, nucleotide-related compounds, taste active values (TAVs) and umami equivalency, sugars, lipid oxidation, Maillard reaction products] and volatile compounds, were investigated. Notably, inosine monophosphate and Glu/Gln were the major compounds contributing to umami taste, as indicated by the highest TAVs in all samples. Raw had higher TAVs than cooked ones, indicating that heat-cooking removes these desirable flavor and taste compounds. This could be proportionally associated with the increase in aldehyde, ketone, and nitrogen-containing volatiles in all cooked samples. GR showed the highest thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (1.46 mg malonaldehyde/kg sample) and browning intensity (0.73), indicating the greatest lipid oxidation and Maillard reaction due to the higher temperature among all cooked samples (p
ISSN:2636-0772
2636-0780
2636-0780
DOI:10.5851/kosfa.2024.e10