Study of the combined effect of spices and marination on beef meat vacuum packaged

  • Daniela Istrati Dunarea de Jos University of Galati, Romania, Faculty of Food Science and Engineering
  • Oana Constantin Dunarea de Jos University of Galati, Romania, Faculty of Food Science and Engineering
  • Aurelia Ionescu Dunarea de Jos University of Galati, Romania, Faculty of Food Science and Engineering
  • Camelia Vizireanu Dunarea de Jos University of Galati, Romania, Faculty of Food Science and Engineering
  • Rodica Dinică Dunarea de Jos University of Galati, Romania, Faculty of Science
Keywords: beef meat, spices, marination, lipid oxidation, lactic acid bacteria, mesophilic aerobic bacteria

Abstract

Fresh beef slices were marinated by immersion in marinades based on dry red wine, lime-tree honey, salt, spices and seasoning plants as thyme (Thymus vulgaris), marjoram (Majorana hortensis), garlic (Allium sativum) and horseradish (Armoracia rusticana). Control samples were represented by raw meat without marination treatment but stored in the same conditions as marinated samples. After marination, meat pieces were packed under vacuum and stored at refrigeration temperature of 4°C for 12 days. The influence of the combined effect of spices and
marination on beef stability was evaluated by monitoring pH evolution, degree of lipid oxidation and by microbiological analysis. For control samples, a mean increase of 0.47 log CFU/g of total mesophilic aerobic bacteria was observed during the 48 h of storage, but for the samples marinated with the addition of spices was observed a decrease of 0.57 log CFU/g. The growth of LAB in control samples was generally limited and did not exceed 5 log CFU/g. During storage at 4°C, marination with the addition in the base marinade (wine, honey, garlic, pepper and salt) of thyme, marjoram and horseradish separately inhibited the growth of LAB while marination with the addition in the base marinade of thyme, marjoram and horseradish together resulted in significantly lower levels of LAB. All marination treatments resulted in significantly lower TBA and POV values at the end of storage compared to the control. Marination with dry red wine, lime-tree honey, thyme marjoram, garlic, and horseradish can evidently control total mesophilic aerobic bacteria, lactic acid bacteria and oxidation of beef meat.

Published
2011-11-23
How to Cite
Istrati, Daniela, Oana Constantin, Aurelia Ionescu, Camelia Vizireanu, and Rodica Dinică. 2011. “Study of the Combined Effect of Spices and Marination on Beef Meat Vacuum Packaged”. The Annals of the University Dunarea De Jos of Galati. Fascicle VI - Food Technology 35 (2), 75-85. https://www.gup.ugal.ro/ugaljournals/index.php/food/article/view/3522.
Section
ORIGINAL ARTICLES

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