บทคัดย่องานวิจัย

Improvement of the commercial quality of chilled Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus) stored in slurry ice: Effects of a preliminary treatment with an antimelanosic agent on enzymatic browning

Santiago P. Aubourg, Vanesa Losada, Marta Prado, José M. Miranda and Jorge Barros-Velázquez

Food Chemistry, Volume 103, Issue 3, 2007, Pages 741-748

2007

บทคัดย่อ

Improvement of the commercial quality of chilled Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus) stored in slurry ice: Effects of a preliminary treatment with an antimelanosic agent on enzymatic browning

The use of slurry ice is gaining increasing importance as an advanced method for the hygienic and efficient chilling and sub-zero storage of aquatic food products. In this work, this technology was applied as a novel technique for the chilling and storage of Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus) – a crustacean species of high-commercial value – under refrigeration conditions at 1.5 °C. In addition, the effects of a preliminary treatment with 0.5% Na HSO3 o­n surface browning were evaluated and compared with the results obtained in control batches not subjected to such treatment. The processing of lobster in slurry ice significantly (p < 0.05) slowed down microbial spoilage, as determined by the counts of aerobes, psychrotrophs, proteolytic bacteria, and lactose-fermenting Enterobacteriaceae, and by the formation of volatile amines. Likewise, the autolytic breakdown mechanisms – as determined by the K value – were also significantly (p < 0.05) inhibited in the slurry ice batch. Remarkably, preliminary treatment with 0.5% sodium metabisulphite permitted better maintenance of the parameters involved in sensory quality – especially as regards the aspect of the carapace – as compared with non-treated batches, and allowed a shelf life of 9 days without surpassing the 150 mg/kg legal limit established for this food additive. o­n contrast, the non-treated batch stored in slurry ice exhibited a shelf life of 5 days. The combination of technological treatments proposed in this work – preliminary antimelanosic treatment and storage in slurry ice – may be successfully applied to other fresh and frozen shellfish species with a view to extending shelf life and to avoiding the legal and toxicological problems derived from current abuse of such antimelanosic agents to prevent shellfish browning.