Novel Approaches to Improve Meat Products’ Healthy Characteristics: A Review on Lipids, Salts, and Nitrites
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Approaches towards Healthier Meat Products
2.1. Lipids in Healthier Meat Products
Product | Technology | Results | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Beef burgers | Gelled emulsion with soybean oil, Maca flour, and Chincho essential oil | Reduced fat, proteins, and SFA contents, increased PUFA and PUFA/SFA ratio. Hardness decreased and lipid oxidation increased. | [48] |
Bologna sausage | Gelled emulsion with soybean | Reduced total fat and SFA content. Effects in physicochemical, rheological, and microstructural properties were greater with reformulation. | [52] |
Alheira | Gelled emulsion based on hemp oil and buckwheat | Increased linoleic and linolenic acids, reduced SFA contents. Physicochemical characteristics were maintained. There was an increase in lipid oxidation related to replacement levels. | [49] |
Goat burger | Oleogel with olive oil | Reduced total fat, increased MUFA and PUFA contents. Related to color, redness, and yellowness were higher for burgers with oleogel. Sensory analysis indicated an increase in hardness and chewiness of goat burgers. | [50] |
Beef burger | Oleogel with pork skin and olive oil | Reduced fat and energy contents, there was an increase in protein content and the FA profile was improved by oleogel use. Hardness and chewiness were higher than the control and the lipidic oxidation remained stable for 7 days. | [51] |
Lamb sausage | Oleogel with lecithin or sorbitol monostearate and canola oil | Increased UFA/SFA ratio and reduction in lipidic oxidation. Decrease in cooking loss, hardness, springiness, chewiness, and resilience. Sensory scores did not show difference up to 50% fat replacement. | [53] |
Goat burger | Hydrogel of sunflower and olive oils | Fat content was reduced, FA profile improved, with SFA content reduction, and increased MUFA and PUFA, specifically oleic and linoleic acid content. | [54] |
Pork sausage | Hybrid hydrogel of inulin and microcrystalline cellulose | Reduced total fat content and peroxide value, although it increased lipidic oxidation. Hardness, chewiness, and water-holding capacity were improved. | [55] |
Deer pate | Microencapsulation of tigernut, chia, and linseed oils | Reduced fat and cholesterol contents, decrease in SFA and increase in PUFA and MUFA contents. Texture was considered softer than control; for color, there were higher values for redness and yellowness. Lipidic oxidation was higher in pates with high n-3 PUFA levels. | [17] |
Pork sausage | High-pressure treating time in reduced fat and reduced salt | Reduction in fat and salt, and moisture increase. Higher water-holding capacity and tenderness, reduction in hardness. | [56] |
Pork emulsion sausages | Ultrasound and aminoacids (L-lysine and L-arginine) | Combination resulted in better outcomes, with a reduction in cooking loss, expressible fluids, and fat content. | [57] |
Chicken nuggets | Control chicken nugget with chicken skin substitution by chia (Salvia hispanica L.) flour 5, 10, 15, and 20%. | 5% chia flour similar to control for aroma and flavor attributes; chia flour >10% impaired acceptance for all evaluated attributes. | [58] |
Chicken nuggets | Fish oil (FOL) and encapsulated fish oil by tragacanth (TRG) and carrageenan (CGN) | Fish oil encapsulation exhibited a safeguarding effect against lipid and protein oxidation. Enhancement of nuggets’ oxidative shelf life and sensory attributes. Tragacanth for encapsulating the fish oil was more efficient in maintaining the sensory characteristics. | [59] |
Chicken nuggets | Okara flour (OF) and rice bran (RB) as fat substitutes | Increased dietary fibers, ashes, and PUFAs. Reduced lipids content, saturated fatty acids, and cholesterol. Better sensory acceptance and higher purchase intention when mixing OF and RB. | [60] |
2.2. Salts on Healthier Meat Products
2.3. Nitrites/Nitrates on Healthier Meat Products
3. Final Remarks
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Product | Approach | Tool | Implications | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Harbin dry Sausage | Salt mixtures | SS1: 70% NaCl and 30% KCl; SS2: 70% NaCl, 20% KCl, 4% Lys, 1% alanine 0.5% citric acid, 1% Calactat, and 3.5% maltodextrin | Higher levels of methyl ketones, methyl and ethyl esters, methyl-branched aldehydes, and alcohols (70% NaCl, 20% KCl); technological properties unchanged. | [91] |
Ham | Salt substitutes: reducing salt from 2.50% to 1.25%; Same + 0.2 Lys; same + 0.4 Lys; same + 0.6% Lys; same + 0.8% Lys | Increased cooking and centrifugation losses. Cooking loss tended to be reduced with increasing levels of Lys. Decrease in hardness, springiness, and chewiness. Improved the WHC and textural properties; improved the sensory scores for mouth-feel, appearance, taste, and global acceptance. Further impaired these attributes. | [86] | |
Dry-cured loin | Salt substitute: 0.2–0.4% of L-Lys; 0.05–0.4% of L-His | Delayed lipid oxidation, produced a reduction in sodium content; promoted physicochemical properties. | [82] | |
Bologna-type sausages | Salt substitutes: replacement of 60% NaCl by KCl; same + Arg and His alone or in combination | Formation of biogenic amines. Did not affect the color parameters. Arg and His were effective in reducing the defects caused by the addition of KCl. Emulsion stability, texture profile, and sensory quality were impaired by the salt substitution. | [22] | |
Jerked beef | Replacement of (50%) NaCl by 50% KCl (F1), 50% CaCl2 (F2), and a blend containing 25% KCl and 25% CaCl2 | CaCl2 blends resulted in final product with bitter taste and rancid aroma and higher SF e TBARS; reduced sodium. | [72] | |
Dry-cured ham | Processing technology: high pressure application | 500 MPa at 3ºC | Decrease softness in muscles. | [77] |
Cooked ham | Processing technology: high pressure application | NaCl content (0, 0.95, 1.33, and 1.90%), phosphate content (0 and 0.25%) and the use of high-pressure processing (100, 300, 600 MPa) | More efforts are needed to understand the feasible levels of NaCl, phosphates, and specific HP treatments to apply in commercial scenarios. HPP at 100 MPa after tumbling was beneficial; salt reduction up to 1.1% NaCl was possible by the salt replacement with KCl (0.2%) in combination with the HP treatment. | [81] |
Dry-cured pork bellies | Natural salty taste through sodium reduction | BC 100% NaCl BK had 50% of NaCl and 50% of KCl; BG had 90% of NaCl and 10% of GP. | BG in dry-cured pork bellies did not affect weight loss, aW, or pH. The sensory evaluation revealed differences in appearance, taste, and flavor among treatments, but did not indicate any negative effects of BG in the product attributes. | [92] |
Cecina | Salt substitutes | 50% NaCl; 50% KCl; 45% NaCl, 25% KCL; 20% CaCl2; 10% MgCl2 | Non-significant differences in hardness. CaCl2 MgCl2 increased luminosity. Increased lipid oxidation and decreased redness (CaCl2 and MgCl2). | [93] |
Lacón | Salt substitutes | 50% NaCl; 50% KCl; 45% NaCl, 25% KCL; 20% CaCl2; 10% MgCl2 30% NaCl, 50% KCL; 15% CaCl2; 5% MgCl2 | 50% NaCl; 50% KCl; and 30% NaCl, 50% KCl; 15% CaCl2; 5% MgCl2—lowest oxidation levels; 45% NaCl, 25% KCL;20% CaCl2; 10% MgCl2—highest degree of oxidation | [94] |
Chicken sausage | Winter mushrooms (Flammulina velutipes) powder (WMP) as salt substitute |
| Increased meat batter pH, reduction in jelly proportion and melted fat exuded. Texture softened. Lipid oxidation inhibited by WMP. No negative effects on color and sensory properties. | [95] |
Chicken nuggets | NaCl substituted with CaCl2 | Control (1.5 g NaCl/100 g) + 3 treatments with CaCl2 substituting 25, 50, 75% of NaCl | Similar sensory acceptance (texture, flavor and overall quality) between the control and 75% sodium reduction; decrease in salty taste in the just-about-right scale test. | [96] |
Chicken nuggets | Salt replacement Added chickpea hull flour |
| Affects appearance and flavor (1). Increased dietary fiber while decreased total cholesterol content (2). | [97] |
Salt-baked-chicken | NaCl substituted with low sodium mixture (LS) | Control: 100% NaCl
| Positive effect on taste and volatile flavor. | [98] |
Meat Product | Nitrite Substitute | Result | Sensory Implication | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mortadella | Powdered parsley | Less growth of L. monocytogenes during storage and lower residual nitrite | Consumer acceptance for products produced with higher concentrations of parsley extract was given | [121] |
Sausages | Pest powder and celery powder with high pressure (HP) | Extends shelf life and improves sensory features | Sausages with celery powder had better sensory quality; low sensory acceptance of sausages with pest powder | [122] |
“Sucuk” a Turkish fermented beef sausage | Beetroot powder | Increasing the a* (red index) outcome in a desired red color during storage | Samples with beetroot powder were comparable to those of control with nitrite | [100] |
Sausages | Celery powder | Protection from quality deterioration during storage and ensures microbiological safety | Sausages treated with paprika powder and blueberry powder were the best evaluated | [123] |
Fermented Sausages | Vegetable powders (celery, beet, and spinach) | Vegetable origin, in powder or in juice, offers high potential as natural substitutes for nitrates and nitrites in processed meats | Sensory evaluation of samples with celery powder comparable with control (potassium nitrate) | [116] |
Sausages | Jasmine tea extract combined with high pressure (HP) | Reduced the C. perfringens count during storage | No results | [124] |
Fermented cooked sausages | Chitosan and radish powder | Improves the microbiological stability | Overall acceptability was influenced | [125] |
Frankfurter-type sausages | ε-polylysine (ε-PL) or ε-polylysine nanoparticle (ε-PLN) combined with plants extracts | Improves shelf life | Sausages formulated with ε-PLN had higher sensory properties | [30] |
Pork bologna | Beet powder and lentil flour | Using both components together had potential application as a sodium nitrite substitute | To increase consumer acceptability, technical improvement is required to reduce the red purge that is released | [118] |
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Rodrigues, S.S.Q.; Vasconcelos, L.; Leite, A.; Ferreira, I.; Pereira, E.; Teixeira, A. Novel Approaches to Improve Meat Products’ Healthy Characteristics: A Review on Lipids, Salts, and Nitrites. Foods 2023, 12, 2962. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods12152962
Rodrigues SSQ, Vasconcelos L, Leite A, Ferreira I, Pereira E, Teixeira A. Novel Approaches to Improve Meat Products’ Healthy Characteristics: A Review on Lipids, Salts, and Nitrites. Foods. 2023; 12(15):2962. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods12152962
Chicago/Turabian StyleRodrigues, Sandra S. Q., Lia Vasconcelos, Ana Leite, Iasmin Ferreira, Etelvina Pereira, and Alfredo Teixeira. 2023. "Novel Approaches to Improve Meat Products’ Healthy Characteristics: A Review on Lipids, Salts, and Nitrites" Foods 12, no. 15: 2962. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods12152962
APA StyleRodrigues, S. S. Q., Vasconcelos, L., Leite, A., Ferreira, I., Pereira, E., & Teixeira, A. (2023). Novel Approaches to Improve Meat Products’ Healthy Characteristics: A Review on Lipids, Salts, and Nitrites. Foods, 12(15), 2962. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods12152962