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      Meat quality and composition of three muscles from French cull cows and young bulls

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          Abstract

          The quality of grilled steaks was assessed by experienced panellists in longissimus thoracis (LT), semitendinosus (St) and triceps brachii (TB) muscles of Aubrac, Charolais, Limousin and Salers breeds raised in two production systems: 15-, 19- and 24-month-old bulls and 4-, 6- and 8-year-old cull cows.

          Scores for sensory ‘initial tenderness’, ‘overall tenderness’, ‘juiciness’, ‘residue after mastication’ and ‘flavour intensity’ for all 497 meats were pooled to derive three eating quality classes.

          Meats from the bulls and cows and from the four breeds were evenly distributed among the three eating quality classes. The highest quality class, representing one third of all the meats, contained 45% of the LT, 35% of the TB and 21% of the St muscles and one third of the meats from the 8-year-old cull cows. The meats in this class tended to have finer fibres, a greater proportion of slow oxidative fibres, slower post-mortem glycolysis, lower connective tissue and higher fat contents than those in the lower classes.

          Lipid content accounted for proportionately 0·56 of the variation in flavour intensity and pH at 3 h post mortem, 0·52 of the variation in tenderness due to muscle and slaughter age.

          Considering both young bulls and cull cows together, tenderness was highest in the meats from 15-month-old bulls and low in the meats from the intermediate age groups, and flavour and juiciness was highest in the meats from the oldest animals from each production system.

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          Relationships between muscle characteristics and meat quality traits of young Charolais bulls.

          Charolais bull calves (106) were used to study the variability in meat quality attributes in relation to the variability in muscle characteristics in the Longissimus thoracis (LT) muscle. The variability in traits was adjusted either to constant age or constant weight at slaughter and thus originated only from differences between animals born, reared and fattened in the same location. The following meat quality attributes were measured: the strength of the myofibrillar resistance to a 20% compression strain measured on the raw meat 2, 7 and 21 days post mortem; and taste panel scores of tenderness (initial and overall), flavour and juiciness of steaks grilled to a 55°C core temperature 6 or 15 days post-mortem. The following muscle characteristics were measured 24 h after slaughter: pH, dry matter, protein, lipid, heme iron and collagen contents, collagen solubility, LDH and ICDH activity, the proportion of slow twitch myosin heavy chain, the mean muscle fibre area and the mean sarcomere length. One fourth to one third of the variability of 2 day mechanical strength and 15 day tenderness or flavour scores were related to the variability in muscle characteristics. Tenderness and strength measurements were predominantly related to the muscle fibre area, collagen characteristics and energetic metabolic activity. Dry matter content was the principal muscle characteristic related to flavour.
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            The characteristics of muscle fiber types of longissimus thoracis muscle and their influences on the quantity and quality of meat from Japanese Black steers.

            Forty-four Japanese Black fattening steers from four groups, produced in four districts and consisting of differing genetic backgrounds were slaughtered to examine the characteristic differences in muscle fiber types at the 6th thoracic vertebra of the M. longissimus thoracis (LT). The influence of percentage, diameter, and relative area of each muscle fiber type on the carcass characteristics and some quantity and quality traits of beef taken from LT, were also investigated. Significant differences in the characteristics of the muscle fiber types were observed among the four groups, except for muscle fiber diameter in the αR fiber, and the relative area of each αW fiber. For all steers, the average percentages and diameters of each muscle fiber type, βR, αR and αW were 26.8, 18.5 and 54.7% and 51.4, 50.6 and 52.4 μm, respectively. The relative area of each fiber type was similar to those of muscle fiber composition. αR Fiber content had significant negative correlations with marbling score (p<0.05), intramuscular fat content (p<0.05) and ultimate pH value (p<0.05). Significant correlations between the diameter of each fiber type, and the quantity or quality traits of the meat were not found, with the exception of red fiber types (βR and αR) and meat color a(∗) values (p<0.05) which were positively correlated.
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              Influence of feeding intensity, grazing and finishing feeding on meat and eating quality of young bulls and the relationship between muscle fibre characteristics, fibre fragmentation and meat tenderness.

              Forty-one autumn-born Friesian bull calves were allocated to two production systems (Extensive='E'and Intensive='I'). In the E-system, animals were loose-housed and fed a roughage-based diet from October to May, followed by a grazing period from May to October. Ten animals were slaughtered directly from pasture in October [360 kg body weight (BW)] and 11 after a 10-week finishing period in tie-stalls (460 kg). The E-bulls were compared with intensively-fed tie-stall-housed young bulls (I) slaughtered at comparable weights (360 kg, n=11 and 460 kg, n=9). The myofibril fragmentation index (MFI) was measured 24 h post mortem in semitendinosus (ST), longissimus dorsi (LD), and supraspinatus (SU) muscles, and meat quality characteristics and sensory evaluation of LD were performed on aged meat. Intramuscular fat content was lower (P<0.001) in all three muscles of E- compared with I-bulls. MFI of ST and LD was lower in E-bulls compared with I-bulls, but only at 360 kg. In contrast, MFI of SU was higher in E- compared with I-bulls at 360 kg. In E- compared with I-bulls, shear force value of ST was higher (P<0.003) at 360 kg, but not at 460 kg. Panel scores for tenderness, taste and juiciness were all lower (P<0.006 to 0.001) and remarks for off-flavour higher in E- compared with I-bulls, the effects being most pronounced at 360 kg. A 10-week finishing period improved all meat and eating quality characteristics of E-bulls. In LD, the correlation between MFI and tenderness was 0.79 (P<0.001), which indicates a potential of MFI as an early predictor of tenderness.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Animal Science
                Anim. Sci.
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                1357-7298
                1748-748X
                June 2003
                August 18 2016
                June 2003
                : 76
                : 3
                : 387-399
                Article
                10.1017/S1357729800058616
                c751f1b4-1974-40f0-8b65-ea30f8b88e58
                © 2003

                https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms

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