Quality of salmon and halibut
The quality of salmon and halibut project was organised in the form of three sub-projects.
1: Effects of freezing and thawing on end-product quality, 2:
The principal factors affecting consumer appreciation of smoked
salmon, and 3: Understanding the relationship between cooking
quality as perceived by professional chefs and technical and
sensory panel measures in halibut. A fourth sub-project was
included during the second year of the project, aimed at areas that
had been identified as important for future work.
Results
1. Assess changes in important quality parameters
during freezing, thawing and frozen storage of Atlantic salmon.
Three tests related to freshness of raw material and effects of
freezing have been made: 1. Freezing and freshness: Sensory panel
and technical quality. 2. Freezing and freshness: Consumer test. 3.
Frozen and refrozen storage. Test 1: Fish killed the same day were
firmer and more chewy (whether measured by taste or machine).
Between samples either stored on ice for 6 days or frozen prerigor
for 0-6 days and then carefully thawed, no differences could be
discerned either in terms of taste, chemical changes or rancidity.
Test 2: A consumer panel drawn from the general public singled out
fish killed the same day as being of poor quality with a different
flavour while the other fish (see test 1) could not be separated.
Test 3: When fish were frozen whole, then thawed, filleted and
refrozen we conclude that both temperature and storage time affect
product quality while the effects on the taste of cooked fish were
negligible. 2. Documentation of quality variation in smoked salmon
at the retailer as a factor of country of origin, smoke house and
season. Throughout a whole year quality variations in cold-smoked
sliced salmon were monitored in a French hypermarket. Factors
recorded were country of origin, smoke house and season. Factors
analysed were chemical composition, safety and quality variables,
and consumer preference. We found that although consumers were able
to detect differences in the taste of the products there were no
significant differences in preference due to country of origin.
Taste was the quality attribute that most frequently determined
preferences.
Fore more details:
http://www.forskningsradet.no/servlet/Satellite?blobcol=urldata&blobheader=application%2Fpdf&blobkey=id&blobtable=MungoBlobs&blobwhere=1165369582244&ssbinary=true
Publisert: 14.03.07 kl 13:30
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