Scientific Publications with referee

Relevance of season and nucleotide catabolism on changes in fillet quality during chilled storage of raw Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.).

Facts

Year 2010
Abstract Farmed 5–6 kg Atlantic salmon were pre-rigor filleted, vacuum packed and subsequently analysed after 1, 9 and 13 days of storage at 4 _C. The study was repeated in February, April, August and October. The conversion of hypoxanthine (Hx) showed the highest seasonal variation among the nucleotide metabolites, with an inverse relationship with sea temperature at harvesting (R2 = 0.95–0.96). The Hx content was inversely related to fresh odour and flavour (R2 = 0.81–0.83), but positively to tenderness (R2 = 0.87). Hence, these results suggest that salmon reared in seawater of 11–15 _C (August–October) maintain a superior sensory quality for a longer period post-mortem than salmon reared at 6–8 _C (February–April). The colour intensity increased from days 1 to 9 post-mortem, probably due to rigor contraction. The highest increase in drip loss was observed in October and the lowest in April. It is proposed that seawater temperature significantly influences the storage life of raw salmon, and that Hx is a valuable biomarker for sensory quality.
Reference Mørkøre, T., Rødbotten, M., Vogt, G., Fjæra, S.O., Kristiansen, I.Ø., Manseth, E. 2010. Relevance of season and nucleotide catabolism on changes in fillet quality during chilled storage of raw Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.). Food Chemistry, Vol 119, 4, pp 1417-1425.
Publisher Food Chemistry,

Related persons

  • Turid Mørkøre

    Senior Scientist

    Phone: 930 37 001

    Cellphone: +47 930 37 001

  • Marit Rødbotten

    Sensory Scientist, Nofima Mat | Adj. assoc. Prof., Norw. Univ. of Life Sciences

    Phone: +47 64970170

    Cellphone: +47 975 87 208

  • Gjermund Vogt

    Research Scientist

    Phone: +47 64970103

    Cellphone: +47 901 13 289

  • Inger Øien Kristiansen

    Engineer

    Cellphone: +47 930 62 253

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