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Consumers' perception and acceptance of boiled and fermented sausages from strongly boar tainted meat
ISSN
1873-4138
0309-1740
Date Issued
2016
Author(s)
DOI
10.1016/j.meatsci.2016.03.018
Abstract
Characteristic off-flavours may occur in uncastrated male pigs depending on the accumulation of androstenone and skatole. Feasible processing of strongly tainted carcasses is challenging but gains in importance due to the European ban on piglet castration in 2018. This paper investigates consumers' acceptability of two sausage types: (a) emulsion-type (BOILED) and (b) smoked raw-fermented (FERM). Liking (9 point scales) and flavour perception (check-all-that-apply with both, typical and negatively connoted sensory terms) were evaluated by 120 consumers (within-subject design). Proportion of tainted boar meat (0, 50,100%) affected overall liking of BOILED, F (2, 238) = 23.22, P < .001, but not of FERM sausages, F (2, 238) = 0.89, P = .414. Consumers described the flavour of BOILED-100 as strong and sweaty. In conclusion, FERM products seem promising for processing of tainted carcasses whereas formulations must be optimized for BOILED in order to eliminate perceptible off flavours. Boar taint rejection thresholds may be higher for processed than those suggested for unprocessed meat cuts. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.