Effect of handling treatment on fillet yields and quality of tropical fish
- 28 June 1986
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in International Journal of Food Science & Technology
- Vol. 21 (3) , 301-310
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2621.1986.tb00409.x
Abstract
The effect on fillet yields and quality of the cold shock reaction of tropical fish when they are iced immediately following death was investigated. Tilapia (Oreochromis moss‐ambicus/niloticus hybrid) were subjected to three handling treatments: filleting immediately following death; icing the whole fish immediately following death and filleting after 3 days; ageing the fish for 6 hr at ambient temperature prior to icing and then filleting after 3 days. All fillets were stored on ice until 9 days after death. Pre‐rigor filleting resulted in the highest filleting yields with the least drip loss and gaping on storage but the shortest shelf life. This was accompanied by the highest post‐mortem metabolic rate. The lowest yields and highest drip loss were obtained by icing the fish immediately at death followed by filleting after 3 days. A 6‐hr delay before icing gave yields and drip loss which were between these two extremes and also the slowest post‐mortem metabolism. The two post‐rigor filleting procedures produced fillets with increased gaping but a longer shelf life compared with pre‐rigor filleting. The implications of the cold shock reaction in terms of recommended codes of practice and handling operations in tropical fisheries are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cold shock reactions in iced tropical fishInternational Journal of Food Science & Technology, 1986
- Rigor tensions and gaping in cod muscleInternational Journal of Food Science & Technology, 1970
- The connective tissues of fish. II. Gaping in commercial species of frozen fish in relation to rigor mortisInternational Journal of Food Science & Technology, 1969
- The relation between the toughness of cod stored at °7°C and °14°C, its muscle protein solubility and muscle pHInternational Journal of Food Science & Technology, 1967
- Postmortem Physicochemical Changes in Unfrozen Newfoundland Trap-Caught CodJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1967
- Free Drip, Flesh pH, and Chalkiness in HalibutJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1966
- Biochemical Changes in Catfish, Tilapia, and Mrigal Fish During Rigor MortisJournal of Food Science, 1965
- Biochemical Changes in Fish Muscle During Rigor MortisJournal of Food Science, 1963
- Protein denaturation in frozen fish. VII.—Effect of the onset and resolution of rigor mortis on denaturationJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1962
- Studies on protein denaturation in frozen fish. I.—Biological factors influencing the amounts of soluble and insoluble protein present in the muscle of the north sea codJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1958