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Impact of Brassica and Lucerne Finishing Feeds and Intramuscular Fat on Lamb Eating Quality and Flavor. A Cross-Cultural Study Using Chinese and Non-Chinese Australian Consumers

Use of forage brassicas (Brassica napus) and lucerne (alfalfa; Medicago sativa) as ruminant feeds has been linked to unacceptable flavors in sheepmeat. Lambs from low and high intramuscular fat sires were allocated to one of four finishing feedsperennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne), lucerne, and two...

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Published in:Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2016-09, Vol.64 (36), p.6856-6868
Main Authors: Frank, Damian, Watkins, Peter, Ball, Alex, Krishnamurthy, Raju, Piyasiri, Udayasika, Sewell, James, Ortuño, Jordi, Stark, Janet, Warner, Robyn
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-a402t-aed9bb0ed874addb198b06dd0282fd55e057b532909ac77ba219e8ab20b17dfb3
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container_end_page 6868
container_issue 36
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container_title Journal of agricultural and food chemistry
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creator Frank, Damian
Watkins, Peter
Ball, Alex
Krishnamurthy, Raju
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Warner, Robyn
description Use of forage brassicas (Brassica napus) and lucerne (alfalfa; Medicago sativa) as ruminant feeds has been linked to unacceptable flavors in sheepmeat. Lambs from low and high intramuscular fat sires were allocated to one of four finishing feedsperennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne), lucerne, and two brassica foragesfor a 6 week period. Grilled loins (Longissimus thoracis et lumborum) were subjected to chemical and sensory analysis by a trained panel and also evaluated by non-Chinese and Chinese background Australian consumers. Consumer liking was similar for both groups, and liking was highest for the brassica- and lucerne-finished lamb, especially from high intramuscular fat sires. No evidence of a distinctive lucerne- or brassica-induced flavor taint was measured by the trained panel or gas chromatography–mass spectrometry–olfactometry. The diets influenced the composition of lipids and branched-chain fatty acids in the subcutaneous fat, and the concentration of total branched-chain fatty acids was positively correlated with flavor and overall liking. Significantly higher levels of key aroma volatiles were measured in the higher fat samples.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/acs.jafc.6b02018
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source American Chemical Society:Jisc Collections:American Chemical Society Read & Publish Agreement 2022-2024 (Reading list)
subjects Animal Feed
Animals
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
Australia
Brassica
Cooking
Cross-Cultural Comparison
Female
Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry
Humans
Male
Medicago sativa
Odorants - analysis
Poaceae
Red Meat - analysis
Sheep, Domestic
Taste
Volatile Organic Compounds - analysis
title Impact of Brassica and Lucerne Finishing Feeds and Intramuscular Fat on Lamb Eating Quality and Flavor. A Cross-Cultural Study Using Chinese and Non-Chinese Australian Consumers
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