Sheep and Goat Meat Processed Products Quality: A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Sheep and Goat Meat Processed Products
2.1. Dried and Semi-Dried Products
2.2. Sausages
2.3. Cooked or Precooked Prepared Products
3. Meat Processed Product Qualities
3.1. Physicochemical Quality
3.2. Microbiological Quality and Safety
3.3. Sensory Quality
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Product | Attributes Measured | Effects Studied | References |
---|---|---|---|
Restructured goat meat | Color, pH, moisture, protein, fat, ash, TBARS | Natural antioxidants on quality | [40] |
Lamb burgers | Moisture, protein, fat, ash, fatty acid profile | Chemical and sensory quality | [55] |
Lamb hamburger | Moisture, protein, fat, ash, TBARS, cholesterol, pH, aW, cooking and texture characteristics | Cotton level on chemical and sensory quality | [56] |
Goat nuggets | pH, color, moisture, protein, fat, ash, texture, TBARS | Antioxidant of bael pulp | [49] |
Goat pâté | Moisture, protein, fat, ash, color, pH, aW, minerals | Variety meat | [57] |
Lamb pâté | pH, aW, moisture, protein, fat, color, nitrites | Storage time on quality | [59] |
Sheep and goat pâtés | pH, aW, dry matter, ashes, protein, fat, collagen, cholesterol, fatty acid profile | Fat sources and proportions on quality | [11] |
Goat patties | pH, moisture, protein, fat, ash, texture | Incorporation of goat fat on quality | [44] |
Smoked goat ham | pH, moisture, protein, fat, ash, NaCl, nitrites, fatty acid profile, volatile substances | Diet effect on nutritional value | [65] |
Cooked sheep ham pâté | pH, aW, moisture, protein, fat, ashes, color, TBARS | % sheep meat in mixture on quality | [58] |
Goat cured meat | pH, aW, water holding capacity, color, myoglobin, texture | Salting and ripening on meat quality | [66] |
Dry-cured Halal goat meat | NaCl, pH, aW | Salting time on meat quality | [67] |
Dry-cured lamb leg | pH, ash, moisture, protein, fat, NaCl, free fatty acids, volatile substances | Tumbling on meat quality | [46] |
Goat “mantas” | pH, aW, moisture, protein, fat and fatty acids, ashes, TBARS | Added value to culled animals | [68] |
Goat and sheep “mantas” | pH, aW, water holding capacity, color, texture | Species | [69] |
Goat and sheep cured legs | pH, ash, moisture, fat, protein, fatty acids, TBARS, NaCl, color, collagen, cholesterol | Species, salting and ripening time | [10] |
Goat frankfurters | Moisture, protein, fat, texture | Source of fat on texture acceptability | [37] |
Mutton sausages | Moisture, aW, pH, fat | Different starter cultures on quality | [39] |
Goat Mortadella | Moisture, ashes, protein, fat, color, pH, aW | Pork fat level | [38] |
Sheep and goat Sucuk | Moisture, fat, protein, ashes, color | Effect of sheep and goat | [30] |
Goat blood sausage | Moisture, fat, protein, ashes, fatty acids, amino acids cholesterol | Descriptive | [70] |
“Buchada” goat | pH, aW, moisture, protein, fat, cholesterol, amino acids | Descriptive | [71] |
Chevon salamis | Moisture, protein, extract ether, ashes, | Descriptive | [72] |
Sheep pastrami | Warner-Bratzler shear force | Vacuuming pressuring on tenderizing | [14] |
Sheep and goat sausages | pH, aW, moisture, protein, fat and fatty acids, ashes, TBARS | Different pork back fat levels added | [9] |
Goat sausages | Moisture, fat, protein, ashes, fatty acids, cholesterol | Combinations with beef | [42] |
Sheep sausages | pH, color, texture, TBARS, free fatty acids, volatile compounds | Oregano concentrations | [73] |
Goat frankfurter | pH, ash, moisture, protein, fat, color, texture, fatty acid profile | Level goat meat | [13] |
Product | Species | Attributes | Panelists (n) | Training | Scale | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dry-fermented sausages | Goat and beef | Appearance, cut appearance, color, odor, texture and taste | 9 | Previous experience | 1—extremely unacceptable; 9—extremely acceptable | [95] |
Dry-cured leg | Lamb | Flavor and texture | 12 | Previous experience and two one-hour sessions | 1—lowest; 5—highest | [46] |
Fresh sausages with and without paprika | Sheep and goat | Odor intensity, off-odor presence, flavor, off-flavor, hardness, juiciness, fibers presence, spiciness and sweetness | 9 | Trained | Structured, unnumbered scale of 10 cm. Minimum (no sensation) to maximum (extremely intense sensation) | [92] |
Patties cooked | Lamb | Oxidized flavor intensity | 7 | Trained two one-hour sessions | Ranking test. 5-point descriptive scale, from 1 to 5 denoted imperceptible or extremely high oxidized flavor, respectively | [96] |
Freshly cooked patties | Lamb | Hop flavor intensity | 6 | Trained one half-hour session | Ranking test | [96] |
Dry-cured hams | Sheep | Appearance, texture, flavor and aroma intensity | 8 | Trained | Structured scale with 9 points. Quantitative-descriptive analysis | [85] |
Dry-cured legs | Sheep and goat | Appearance, taste, flavor and texture | 9 | Previous experience and specific training | Continuous 10-cm scale. Left anchor-lowest intensity to right anchor-highest intensity | [93] |
Cured legs | Sheep and goat | Appearance, aroma, taste and texture | 10 | Previous experience and specific training | Continuous 10-cm scale. Left anchor-lowest intensity to right anchor-highest intensity | [10] |
Sausages | Sheep | Smell, taste, and appearance (control vs. N1, N2 and N3 levels of oregano extract) | 14 | Trained | Verbal scale with 0 to 6 numerical conversion scale using no, very slight, slight/moderate, moderate, moderate/large, large and very large differences, respectively | [73] |
Frankfurters | Goat | Color, odor, taste, hardness and juiciness | 7 | Trained | Intensity scale test of 9 points for color, odor, taste, hardness and juiciness | [13] |
Cooked ham and Deli type sausages | Sheep and goat | Color, taste, odor and firmness | 10 | Trained | Triangular test and a structured lineal scale (10 cm) for each parameter to evaluate the found difference | [92] |
Sheep and goat pâtés | Sheep and goat | Appearance, aroma intensity, taste intensity and texture | 8 | Trained | Structured but unnumbered 10-cm scale Minimum (no sensation) to maximum (extremely intense sensation) | [94] |
Product | Species | Panelists (n) | Type of Panelist | Attributes | Scale | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fermented sausage with different levels of fat addition | Goat | 30 | Nontrained individuals | Texture, appearance, taste, aroma, overall acceptability | Hedonic nine-points scale. From dislike extremely (1) to like extremely (9) | [107] |
Mortadella prepared with different levels of fat | Goat | 80 | Potential consumers | Appearance, color, odor, flavor, overall acceptability | Hedonic nine-points scale. From dislike extremely (1) to like extremely (9) | [38] |
Cooked ham-type pâté | Sheep | 50 | Nontrained panelists | Overall acceptability | Hedonic nine-points scale. From less preferred than the reference (1) to preferred more than the reference (9) | [58] |
Fermented sausage | Sheep | 60 | Consumers | Liking of flavor | 9-point category scale. From dislike extremely (1) to like extremely (9) | [106] |
Fresh sausages with and without paprika | Sheep and goat | 82 | Consumers | Taste, texture, spiciness, overall acceptability | Unstructured 10-cm scale. Anchors at the extremities with do not like (0) to like very much (10) | [92] |
Fresh sausages with different levels of pork fat | Sheep and goat | 26 | Nontrained individuals in 2 sessions | Taste, spicy taste, texture, overall acceptability | Unstructured 10-cm scale. Anchors at the extremities with do not like (0) to like very much (10) | [9] |
Patties | Lamb | 126 | Consumers | Flavor score/liking | Structured hedonic nine-points scale. From ranging from extremely disliking (1) to extremely liking (9) | [96] |
“Cecina” dry-cured legs with different fatness levels | Sheep | 320 | Individuals (Chinese, sub-Saharan, Andeans, Spanish) | Overall acceptability | Hedonic nine-points scale. From dislike extremely (1) to like extremely (9) | [108] |
Dry-cured ham | Sheep | 375 | Individuals | Maturation time, smoking, sodium reduction | No scale | [109] |
Coppa | Sheep | 375 | Individuals | Natural antioxidant, smoking, sodium reduction | No scale | [109] |
Frankfurters (25–100%) vs. beef | Goat | 60 | Consumers (40% male, 60% female) | Appearance, color, odor, taste, texture | CATA (Check-all-that-apply) and rate (0–10) overall acceptance (liking) | [13] |
Pâtés | Sheep and goat | 25 | Individuals | Global acceptability | 10-cm scale. Anchors at the extremities with do not like (0) to like very much (10) | [94] |
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Teixeira, A.; Silva, S.; Guedes, C.; Rodrigues, S. Sheep and Goat Meat Processed Products Quality: A Review. Foods 2020, 9, 960. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9070960
Teixeira A, Silva S, Guedes C, Rodrigues S. Sheep and Goat Meat Processed Products Quality: A Review. Foods. 2020; 9(7):960. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9070960
Chicago/Turabian StyleTeixeira, Alfredo, Severiano Silva, Cristina Guedes, and Sandra Rodrigues. 2020. "Sheep and Goat Meat Processed Products Quality: A Review" Foods 9, no. 7: 960. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9070960
APA StyleTeixeira, A., Silva, S., Guedes, C., & Rodrigues, S. (2020). Sheep and Goat Meat Processed Products Quality: A Review. Foods, 9(7), 960. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9070960