The display of retail packs of ground beef after their storage in master packages under various atmospheres.

C O Gill, T Jones
Author Information
  1. C O Gill: Agriculture Canada Research Station, Bag Service 5000, Lacombe Alberta, Canada T0C 1S0.

Abstract

Batches of coarsely ground beef trimmings were each divided into four portions. One portion from each batch was vacuum packaged, then stored at -1·5°C. The other portions were finely ground and distributed in retail packs. The retail packs were master packaged under atmospheres of N(2), CO(2) or O(2) + CO(2) (2:1, v/v), then stored at 2°C. The product was assessed after storage times of up to 32 days. For each assessment, a vacuum pack and a master pack of each type, each containing products from the same batch, were withdrawn from storage. The vacuum packaged product was finely ground and distributed into retail packs. The newly prepared retail packs and those from the master packs were displayed in a retail cabinet in which air temperatures averaged 4 ± 2°C. The appearance of the displayed product from each storage packaging was assessed twice daily until it was judged to be unacceptable. At the beginning and end of the display, the product in each pack was assessed for discoloration and off-odours, the chemical states of the muscle pigment at the exposed surface were estimated, and the surface microflora was characterized. The appearance of the product displayed after storage in a vacuum pack, for times up to 32 days, became unacceptable within 48 h. A product stored in any of the master packs for 1 day appeared unacceptable after 6 h of display. The display life of products stored under N(2) or CO(2) was similar to that of the vacuum packaged products when storage times were between 2 and 24 days but the display life was shorter when the storage times were 28 or 32 days. The display life of products stored under O(2) + CO(2) was similar to that of the vacuum packaged product when storage times were 2, 4 or 6 days, but the appearance of products stored under O(2) + CO(2) for 8 days or longer was unacceptable when master packs were opened. Apart from those latter packs, a product was not discoloured when storage packs were opened. However, all products were discoloured, and the metmyoglobin fractions of the surface pigments had increased, when the product was withdrawn from display. The products in all storage packagings developed flora dominated by lactic acid bacteria. The spoiage flora on products stored in vacuum pack or under O(2) + CO(2) did not attain the maximum numbers of 10(7)/g during either storage or display. Those maximum numbers were attained on products stored under N(2) and CO(2) after 16 and 28 days storage respectively. Some products stored under N(2) for 16 days or longer developed moderate or strong off-odours during display that were ascribable to microbial action. Other products developed only slight, non-microbial off-odours during display. Retail-ready packs or ground beef master-packaged under an oxygen-depleted atmosphere could then have a useful storage life of about 30 days in commercial circumstances.

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