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Poultry Science, Vol 82, Issue 8, 1352-1355
Copyright © 2003 by Poultry Science Association


Articles

Effects of high frequency electrical stunning and decapitation on early rigor development and meat quality of broiler breast meat

WD McNeal and DL Fletcher

Department of Poultry Science, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602-2772, USA.

Three independent trials were conducted to determine the effects of high frequency electrical stunning followed by decapitation on broiler breast meat rigor development and meat quality. All birds were stunned and half of the birds were killed using a conventional unilateral neck cut, half were killed by decapitation, and both groups were allowed to bleed for 90 s prior to scalding and picking. New York dressed carcasses were chilled in a static ice-water bath for 90 min and held at 2 degrees C prior to deboning. Breast fillets were removed from the carcasses at 2, 4, and 24 h postmortem. From the right breast fillet, R-values and pH were determined at time of deboning. The left fillet was wrapped in plastic and held for 24 h at 2 degrees C prior to determining lightness (L*), redness (a*), yellowness (b*), cook yield, and Allo-Kramer shear. Deboning time affected raw meat pH, R-value, cook loss, and shear value but had no effect on color. The breast meat from the decapitated birds had significantly higher pH values at 2 and 24 h postmortem than the conventionally killed birds. Other than for the effect on breast meat pH, decapitation had no effect on rigor development, R-value, meat color, or meat quality as measured by cooked-meat yield and Allo-Kramer shear.


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C. Z. Alvarado, M. P. Richards, S. F. O'Keefe, and H. Wang
The Effect of Blood Removal on Oxidation and Shelf Life of Broiler Breast Meat
Poult. Sci., January 1, 2007; 86(1): 156 - 161.
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