GB2257891A - Pre-dusting of protein products with collagen fibres - Google Patents
Pre-dusting of protein products with collagen fibres Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- GB2257891A GB2257891A GB9219324A GB9219324A GB2257891A GB 2257891 A GB2257891 A GB 2257891A GB 9219324 A GB9219324 A GB 9219324A GB 9219324 A GB9219324 A GB 9219324A GB 2257891 A GB2257891 A GB 2257891A
- Authority
- GB
- United Kingdom
- Prior art keywords
- collagen
- products
- fish
- collagen fibres
- meat
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Granted
Links
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
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- A23J3/04—Animal proteins
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A23—FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
- A23L—FOODS, FOODSTUFFS OR NON-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; PREPARATION OR TREATMENT THEREOF
- A23L13/00—Meat products; Meat meal; Preparation or treatment thereof
- A23L13/03—Coating with a layer; Stuffing, laminating, binding, or compressing of original meat pieces
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A23—FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
- A23L—FOODS, FOODSTUFFS OR NON-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; PREPARATION OR TREATMENT THEREOF
- A23L13/00—Meat products; Meat meal; Preparation or treatment thereof
- A23L13/60—Comminuted or emulsified meat products, e.g. sausages; Reformed meat from comminuted meat product
- A23L13/62—Coating with a layer, stuffing or laminating
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A23—FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
- A23L—FOODS, FOODSTUFFS OR NON-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; PREPARATION OR TREATMENT THEREOF
- A23L17/00—Food-from-the-sea products; Fish products; Fish meal; Fish-egg substitutes; Preparation or treatment thereof
- A23L17/75—Coating with a layer, stuffing, laminating, binding or compressing of original fish pieces
Landscapes
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Nutrition Science (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Food Science & Technology (AREA)
- Polymers & Plastics (AREA)
- Zoology (AREA)
- Biochemistry (AREA)
- Marine Sciences & Fisheries (AREA)
- Meat, Egg Or Seafood Products (AREA)
Abstract
A process of treating food products comprises using collagen fibres in a finely divided state as a pre-dusting system for protein products, such as meat (e.g. burger) and fish products, prior to their coating. The collagen fibre pre-dust may be heated to allow partial conversion to gelatin and may then be batter coated and enrobed with crumb, potato or nuts or may be directly coated with spices, seasonings, flavourings, colourings, nuts, potato, dried fruit, sweet flavoured coatings or breadcrumbs.
Description
PRE-DUSTING PROTEIN PRODUCTS
The presence invention relates to improvements in and relating to protein products and in particular to the pre-dusting of protein products using collagen fibre.
According to the present invention there is provided a process of treating food products in which collagen fibres in a finely divided state are used in a pre-dusting system for protein products prior to their coating.
In our co-pending application number 9026224.7 there is described and claimed a process for producing collagen fibres from tissues containing collagen.
The tissues which may be used as starting material for the process the invention include, for example, animal tissues including mamnalian connective tissue, sinews, dermis (split skin or corium after removal of the outer skin layers from hide or head hide), bird skins and connective tissue, reptile skins and connective tissue, and fish skin and connective tissue. Other sources of the tissues which may be used in accordance with the invention comprise decalcificated bone dentine, and collagen-containing tissues from the cardiovascular system, synovial membrane, viscera, subcutaneous membrane, fetal dermis, vitreous humour, intervertebral discus, basement membrane, lens capsule, kidney glomeruli, placental membrane, and lung and muscle tissues.
Preferred tissues include mammalian connective tissues or sinews, such as ligaments, cartilage and tendon, for example, 'Backstraps' or 'Paddi wacks' from cattle. Other preferred sources of the collagen used in the process of the invention are fish skins and the dermis of animals whose skins are usually consumed as food constituents, although bovine dermis is also a preferred source providing that its use is within the provisions of the prevailing food regulations.
The collagen fibres produced according to the present invention nay also contain smaller quantities of other structural proteins, such as elastin, reticulin, connectin and desmin, and also mucopolysaccharides which are all naturally associated with collagen in varying amounts in tissues.
Preferably, residual flesh and fats are manually or otherwise removed, for example by scraping, tumble abrasion or by soaking in salts such as sodium chloride or in enzyme preparations such as papain. Soluble non-collagenous proteins and polysaccharides may be removed, if desired, along with a fraction of the soluble collagen, by soaking for example in a solution of sodium acetate, sodium dihydrogen phosphate or potassium chloride. These procedures may also serve to remove other soluble materials present, such a glycans and saponified fats. Such soluble materials may also be removed, if desired, by soaking in saturated white lime solution and thereafter removing excess calcium.
Pveducing the pH value to or towards the isoelectric point (pF14.6) for example to pH5.0, to provide enhanced storage stability in the treated tissue material may be desirable following treatment with salt solutions.
Animal tissues rich in collagen, such as those collected from abattoirs may conveniently be used immediately or be stored by freeezing, for example at minus 20"C., or by buffering, for example in a solution of a weak acid, such as citric acid, or in citric acid and sodium citrate, at for example pH5.0 or by pickling, for example in a solution of sodium chloride and a strong acid, such as hydrochloric acid or sulphuric acid.The source of the tissues is conveniently bovine, but other collagen-containing materials, for instance materials from pigs, sheep, goats, game (including deer, eland and antelope), rabbit, hare, kangaroo, dog, monkey, camel, buffalo, horse, birds such as poultry (including chicken, duck, goose and turkey), pigeon and game birds, reptiles (including turtles and snakes), fish (including salmon, trout, eel, cod, herring, plaice, whiting, halibut, turbot, ling, squid, tuna, sardines, swordfish, dogfish, and shark), marine mammals (including whales), amphibians (including frogs), or crustacea (including shellfish, crayfish, lobster, crab, shrimps and prawns) may also be used as starting materials in the process of the invention.If pork (for example from pig achilles tendon) or chicken (or exa::ple from defeathered skin or hen neck skin rich in collagen) or turkey ( for example from leg sinews) or other collagen-containing tissues are used, it is preferred that these have a low fat content. Where fat contents are particularly high then fat rendering at low temperatures (for example below 60"C) mechanical screw pressing, solvent extraction, with for example, hexane, and treatment with lipase enz > mes, such as fungal lipases, may be advantageous.
It is preferred to carry out sample analyses of the cleaned tissues in order to determine the protein (particularly the collagen content), fat, moisture, calcium, ash, heavy metals, pH value, and any zicrobiological contamination. This is particularly preferred when the fibrous collagen produced by the process of the present invention is required to be of food grade quality.
In accordance with the present invention, the tissue material is comminuted, for example by being granulated, minced, cut, chopped, or ground through a perforated plate for examPle, a 6mm perforated plate. Conveniently, the material may be fed continuously into a grinder to produce comminuted pieces, while ensuring that any temperature rise during the comminuting process is kept to a minimum. Comminuting tissues taken straight from a freezer, for example tissues which have been maintained at a temperature of minus 20"C, is preferred. It has been found convenient, for example, to arrange that the material is comminuted into pieces of about five millimetres in diameter.
If desired, the comminuted product thus obtained may be pasteurised or sterilised , or treated to retard microbial growth, for instance by treatment for a short period with dry high pressure steam, with hot fats or oils or with ultra-violet light or ionising radiation. Precautions are preferably taken to ensure that the minimum of moisture and heat transfer occurs to the comminuted product during the pasteurisation or sterilisation. It may be advantageous to carry out sample analysis of the pasteurised or sterilised comminuted material after thorough sample mixing.
The comminuted material may be dried by using any suitable conventional drying or dehydrating means. Preferably the material is passed to the drying stage with minimum delay, and especially within a period not exceeding 24 hours. The drying may be carried out by hot-air drying procedures such as in a tray dryer or band drier, or drum drier, but other hot-air dryers such as tube dryers, paddle or tumble dryers or fluid bed dryers may employed. Microwave dryers, radio frequency driers, or infra-red dryers may also be used. Drying can also be carried out in vacuum dryers, extruders or in freeze dryers, including for instance by accelerated freeze drying and by freeze substitution. Drying may also be carried out using direct solar heating or in smoking ovens, when the product may also acquire a degree of microbial preservation and smoke flavour.The comminuted material may also be dehydrated by using fats or oils or in ethanol or other solvents.
If conventional hot-air drying of the comminuted material is employed, then the drying is preferably effected at a temperature up to and including 750C, particularly at a temperature within the range from 35CC to 75 C. Within this range, drying at a temperature of from 450C to 55tic is especially preferred. If a tray dryer or a tube dryer is used, the drying process is advantageously carried out within 24 hours, and preferably within 12 hours and the material may advantageously by turned occasionally, and preferably continuously, to facilitate even heating and to obviate localised high temperatures. Rapid drying may be facilitated if relatively low loading densities of the comminuted material are employed, for example from 5 to 10 kilograms per square metre, with an air speed ot approximately 3 metres per second, the dryer being maintained at an air temperature of approximately 55cC and at a relative humidity of approximately 40%.
If a fluid bed dryer is employed, shorter drying times are preferable, and the temperature is advantageously maintained below 75"C and preferably below 6Occ. If microwave drying, radio frequency drying, infra-red drying, solar heating, smoking, vacuum drying, extrusion, or accelerated freeze drying methods are used, the temperature is advantageously maintained below 75"C and preferably below 60cm. If the drying is effected by dehydration in fats or oils or other solvents, then a temperature of up to approximately 1200C may be used, with the fat or oil or other solvent acting as a moisture-expelling solvent while protecting the collagen from being converted into gelatin as well as serving to reduce protein denaturisation.
During the drying process, the moisture content of t-he material is preferably reduced to less than 10% by weight.
The dried material is then milled in accordance with the present invention. A wide variety of conventional milling means may be employed. The use of a hammer mill or a pin mill is particularly preferred, but pinned disc mills, cross beater mills and turbo mills may also be used. Advantageously the milling may be arranged to take place through a screen for example through a 2.5mm, 3.0mm or 3.5mum perforated screen to produce a collagen fibre, or through a finer screen, for example1 a perforated screen of 2.0mm or less, to produce a finely divided collagen fibre. The product may thus have individual fibre lengths of up to 10 millimetres, preferably a fibre length within the range of from 0.1 to 5 millimetres, and especially of from 0.1 to 0.5 or from 0.5 to 5 millimetres, inclusive depending on the application.Any unground lumps passing through the screen are preferably separated and recycled through the mill.
Any rise in temperature during the milling process is preferably maintained at a minimum by careful control of the feed rate and by air cooling. However, it is particularly preferred that a coolant is added to the material undergoing the milling if there is any possibility of a substantial rise in temperature occuring. The coolant may be, for example, liquid nitrogen or solid carbon dioxide.
At all stages in the process of producing collagen fibres in accordance with the invention, the temperature is maintained sufficiently low to prevent substantial conversion of collagen to gelatin. Preferably the temperature is kept below a maximum temperature of 75"C.
Cyclones can be used to collect the product from the milling process, and the product may then be passed through a metal detector and weighed into polyethylene containers.
It is advantageous to carry out sample analyses of the milled product, after thorough sample mixing. A typical analysis of bovine collagen fibre produced in accordance with the present invention is as follows:
Protein 92%
Fat 2.8%
Moisture 5%
Ash 0.2%
Arsenic Less than one part per million
Lead Less than one part per million
A further example of a typical analysis of collagen fibres produced in accordance with the present invention is as follows:
Protein 85.7%
Fat 2.3X
Moisture 5.0%
Ash 7.0X Arsenic Less than one part per million
Lead Less than one part per million
Percentages and parts stated are by weight. The protein may be collagen alone or it may contain other structural proteins naturally associated with collagen in varying amounts in animal tissues, such as elastin, reticulin, connectin, and desmin.A small amount of carbohydrate, in the form of polysaccharides naturally associated with collagen in animal tissues, may also be present. The bacterial specification of the collagen fibre is preferably that of a substantially sterile material.
The collagen content of the material produced, or the content of collagen plus the other structural proteins generally present in the material produced, is preferably at least 85% by weight on a dry weight basis, but it may be lower than this if other substances are present, for instance moisture, fat (including animal fats, vegetable oils and hydrogenated animal and vegetable oils), other proteins (including meat proteins, milk proteins, egg proteins, vegetable proteins such a soya proteins, microbial proteins such as single cell proteins, and hydrolysed or autolysed vegetable or meat proteins), or other foods, food ingredients or food additives including cereals, carbohydrates such as sugars, starches, modified starches, cellulose, modified cellulose and pectins, polyhydric alcohols such as glycerol, polyethylene glycol and sorbitol, gums such a xanthan gum, alginates and tragacanth gum, salts such as sodium chloride, sodium pyrophosphate and curing salts, spices, seasonings, flavourings and colourings.
These additional substances may act as dilutents, humectants, thickeners, or other functional ingredients in the meat or meat products, offals, fish or fish products or other protein products or in cosmetic or medical products, comprising the collagen fibres produced in accordance with the present invention.
The colagen fibre produced may then be added, in accordance with the present invention, to protein products. The protein product or products can comprise raw or corked meat or meat products, offals, fish and fish products, and other protein products for food for human use, pet food, animal feed or fish food use, and also for use in cosmetic products and medical products. The addition may be made by any of a wide range of conventional mixing, adding, blending or compounding means.
Collagen fibres produced by any other method may also be added in accordance with the present invention. Such methods comprise, for instance, part extraction of collagen from animal tissues with (for example) sodium citrate buffer solution of pH 3.7 to t.3 and reconstitution into needle-like crystalline fibres by dialysis against water or diluted salt solutions such as disodiun hydrogen phosphate solution; bowl chopping, slurrying and extruding collagen containing tissues into fibres, followed by chopping and drying as required; and cell culture of collagen into forked fibres. These collagen fibres may be added hy the process of the present invention to protein products such as protein proucts for use as food for human consumption, pet foods, animal feeds, fish food cosmetic products and medical products.
The collagen fibre is particularly useful for restructuring poorly textured meats (particularly comminuted meats), fish products, and other protein products so as to enhance their textural properties, water retention, fat retention, eating quality, juiciness, shape and size retention, or consumer appeal or to increase their meat content, fish content or protein content, or to make more cost effective products. The enhanced appeal need not be only to the human consumer, but any also have greater appeal to domestic pets when used in pet foods and to farm animals and fish when used in animal feeds and in fish foods.
Preferably collagen fibre from a particular animal species, including individual species of mammals, birds, reptiles or fish is added to the product derived from the same species, but collagen fibres from any particular species can be added to the product derived from a different species, whether mamnalian, bird, reptile or fish, and also to protein products derived from vegetable or microbial sources.
The following example illustrates the incorporation of collagen fibres in fish sticks in accordance with the present invention.
96 parts by weight of a frozen fish slurry of white fish, salmon or crab is defrosted into a paddle type mixer, and 4 parts by weight of bovine collagen fibres are streamed in while mixing.
The temperature of the batch is raised to 4 C while mixing is continued, and the batch is then immediately placed in moulds and frozen. The fish sticks thus produced contain fish and added protein (beef collagen) for ingredient labelling purposes. If fish collagen fibres are used instead of the bovine collagen fibres, then this would be included with the total fish protein content and labelled accordingly. The fish sticks may be battered and crumb coated as required, or precoated using finely divided collagen fibres and seasoned or coated with, for example, crumb, almonds, potato, dried fruit and sweet flavoured coatings.
?lechanically recovered meat (ARM) is generally low in collagen because gristles and matrix mucopolysaccharides are not incorporated. Consequently, the addition of collagen fibres to the MKM in accordance with the present invention can bring the analysis of the product into line with that of traditional meat cuts.
Incorporation of the collagen fibres is particularly advantageous for example, in the fornulation of burgers, where gristle-free meat of approximately 80% meat content can be converted into
American-style burgers with excellent juiciness and retention of shape by the addition of 4% bovine cbllagen fibres.
The following example illustrates the incorporation of collagen fibres into beef burgers in accordance with the present invention.
Raw degristled forequarter beef (LO by weight) is minced and transferred to a paddle type mixer, and bovine MRM (45% by weight) and sodium chloride (1% by weight) are added and thoroughly mixed in. Bovine collagen fibres (4t by weight) are then streamed in while further mixing, and water (10% by weight) is added and mixed in thoroughly. The temperature is raised to 40C and the mix is formed into any desired shape and size in pattie forming machines, and then immediately frozen. The ingredient list of the resulting beef burgers will be: beef, water and salt, and the analysis will be 100% meat.
The fiB or other poorly textured meats (especially comminuted meats), meat products, offals, fish (especially comminuted fish), fish products and other protein products can be raw, sterilised pasteurised, partly cooked or cooked before the collagen fibre is added to it in accordance with the process of the invention.
However, it is preferred that the product comprising the admixed collagen fibre, subsequently to the admixture, is subjected to a cooking or heating procedure. In this way the functional properties of the collagen fibres can be fully, or substantially fully, exhibited in the product of the invention.
The use of collagen fibres in accordance with the invention is also advantageous in the production of continental-type sausages either cooked (for instance frankfurters) or cured (for instance bierwurst). Addition of the collagen fibre may thus enhance the textural properties of the sausage products and act as a binder where non-.ueat binders, such as soya derivatives, cannot be used because of legislation. In meat products incorporating offals, for instance hearts, the percentage incorporation of the offals may be increased and their textural properties improved by the addition of collagen fibres. Reformed eats, if formed from low-grade connective tissue products, such as raw or cooked MRM and offal, may be prepared with better cohesiveness and at lower cost by the incorporation of collagen fibres produced by the present invention.Fat retention in particular is enhanced giving improved succulence and the addition of extra lipids, for instance meat fats, may also be assisted by the presence of the incorporatd collagen fibres, resulting in a further improvement in juiciness.
In binding properties, for example in reformed meat and reformed fish for foods for human consumption or for pet foods (particularly when MRM is used or when other comminuted meats or fish are used which have lost or when other comminuted meats or fish are used which have lost cohesiveness), incorporation of the collagen fibres can replace the addition of non-meat or non-fish materials such a wheat gluten and soya protein, which are not universally permitted in Continental style cooked meats, or of bovine plasma which can not always be included within the officially recorded meat content of the product. At the same time, textural properties, water retention, fat retention, eating qualities, juiciness, shape and size retention1 meat or fish content and/or consumer appeal may be substantially enhanced.
Products formed by restructuring offal proteins or bone proteins, for example by high-temperature extrusion or by deposition (for instance into alkali), may be further improved by incorporating collagen fibres in accordance with the present invention.
Collagen fibres can be advantageously included in meat or meat products to adjust the protein to total meat ratio to meet prevailing legislation.
Meat products, fish products or other protein producs which have been passed through a cooker extruder, with or without co-extrusion of pastry or potato or starches (for instance rice starch) to produce logs or coated logs of cooked products in any of a4 variety of shapes, may be substantially improved in as regards their textural properties, water retention, fat retention, eating quality, juiciness, shape and size retention, meat or fish content, and/or consumer appeal by the addition of collagen fibres in accordance with the present invention. Similar formed products, produced in extruders through vacuum fillers via shaped nozzles capable of substantially further compressing the product, may also be improved by the addition of the collagen fibres in accordance with the present invention.
The incorporation of the collagen fibres into the protein product can advantageously be combined wth the addition of salts such as sodium chloride, sodium pyrophosphate and curing salts to enhance still further the binding properties, moisture retention or other desirable characteristics.
The incorporation of collagen fibres into meat or meat products can also be effected with advantage simultaneously with the addition of gums, preferably xanthum gum, to improve still further the textural properties and moisture retention during cooking.
Such gums can be added by any of a variety of conventional means, for instance by injection, tumbling, massaging or admixing. For example, if xanthan gum is used, the gum solution preferaby contains from 0.2 to 1.0% by weight of the gum.
In all the foregoing applications to which the collagen fibres of the invention can be put, the collagen fibres appear to act in two major ways. Firstly, when mixed with other proteins such as mammalian muscle proteins in an aqueous environment they swell somewhat due to hydration and, being fibrous and of optimum length, they physically bind the fibres of the muscle proteins together.On cooking or other subsequent heating or re-cooking, the shortening of the collagen fibres which occurs at a temperature in the range from about 55"C to 65 C as well as the physical presence of the collagen fibres themselves causes the eating quality of the product to be greatly improved by introducing a degree of chewiness or texture into the product, thus simulating the eating qualities of a piece of steak.
Secondly, they svell at higher temperatures and become softened as they take up water and partially convert to soluble gelatin on cooking at about 70"C to 85"C thus causing an improvement in tenderness. At the same time, and to a greater extent on subsequent cooling, an increase in water retention and improved perceived juiciness is caused by the gelling properties of the gelatin, giving an overall improvenent in size and shape retention and enhanced eating quality. At cooing temperatures above 85tC (internal temperature) then increasing proportions of the collagen fibres are converted into soluble gelatin, thus causing a further improvement in tenderness but a reduction in the textural strnCth of the product.
The application of pressure while forming the products containing collagen fibres is advantageous, for instance the use of p3ate freezers (for example at 5 p.s.i. at -400C), extruders (for example at up to 25 p.s.i.) and particularly vacuum fillers under extrusion (for example at 25 to 50 p.s.i.) ideally through shaped nozzles, especially the Z-bend configuration of extrusion nozzles.
This may be due to a degree of alignment of the fibres and of theirilax;ering in the most advantageous cases by the application of pressure in two directions and also to a more intimate binding of the collagen fibres and the meat or fish proteins for example under the application of the applied forces.
Collagen fibres in a finely divided state, typically ith a fibre length within the range of from 0.1 to 0.5 millimetres inclusive, can be advantageously used as, or as part of, a predusting system for protein products, particularly meat products and fish products. For example, a finely divided collagen fibre (or powder) may be dusted onto a burger and heated to allow partial conversion to gelatin, for instance by passing it through a heated tunnel. Powder or granular coatings, such as spices, seasonings, flavouring, colourings, nuts, potato, dried fruit, sweet flavoured coatings and breadcrumbs, can be effectively bound to the partially gelatineised collagen coating either by mixing then with the collagen prior to the predusting stage or by adding them after partial collagen gelatinisation.Thus the need to use a batter mix prior to addition of the coating is eliminated and with it the necessity to seal on the coating to prevent the migration of moisture utilising, for example deep fat frying. Finely divided collagen fibres can also be advantageously utilised as a precoating system for protein products particularly meat and fish products and sealed by heating to allow batter coating and enrobing with coatings such as crumb, potato and nuts without the need for to further seal the product by for example deep fat frying.
The present invention comprises collagen fibres when produced by the process of the invention.
The present invention also comprises protein products containing incorporated collagen fibres when produced by the process of the invention. The protein of the products may be raw, pasteurised or sterilised, part cooked or cooked meat or meat products from mammalian, bird, or reptile sources, offals, fish or fish products, including products derived from whales, krill or crustacea, or other proteins such as proteins of vegetable or microbial origin, and products made from these proteins.
The following example further illustrates the present invention.
Raw mechanically recovered meat (MRM) is brought up in temperature from deep frozen to 1"C and from 1% to 6t and preferably approximately 4, by weight of collagen fibre produced for instance by the process described in this invention is added portionwise and mixed thoroughly in a efficient blender, for example in a double arm type ribbon trough mixer. The temperature is brought up to 4 C, the preferred maximum being 5 C, and the mixture is placed on freezer trays and plate frozen.On cooking or precooking at an internal temperature of 65"C to 100 C (or from 115 to 125do for a shorter tine in a pressure cooker or retort), the collagen fibres contract and then partially convert to geletin, thus binding the product together and improving the eating qualities. At temperatures substantially above 80"C the binding properties of the formed gelatin may be accentuated, but the textural enhancement of the collagen fibres may be reduced.
Conversion of the collagen fibres to gelatin is approximately 5Z to 10% at 64"C to 70"C, and 7Z to 15% at 750C to 850C when held for a short period. At 85"C for a prolonged period, conversion may reach 507. At 1000C conversion may be 10% to 20% when held for ai short period, and up to 100% when held for about 4 hours.
Microwave heating tends preferentially to increase the solubility of the collagen fibres relative to the muscle proteins in meat, and hence lower internal temperatures can produce levels of gelatin equivalent to that obtained by higher internal temperatures produced by conventional cooking means.
The products thus produced may be used for example as replaceaent meat cuts by slicing, as steaks by forming, and as Chinese stir-fry ingredients or meat lumps for canned meats, pet foods, or soups, by dicing. A similar set of products may be produced if the raw material used in the process is mechanically recovered fish, for instance from deboning processes.
In }$CY and other meats and meat products and mechanically recovered fish and fish products, where the structure of the tissue has been destroyed and which on cooking is no longer able to prevent the egress of fluid released by proteins, collagen fibres can greatly increase vater and lipid-holding capacities thus reducing 'shrink' where it is derived from both aqueous and fatty sources, for example in cooked meats. In such products, a further improvement in water-holding capacity may be obtained by the addition of gums, for instance xanthan gum and a0g1.nates, and of salts, for instance sodium chloride, sodium pyrophosphate and curing salts. In this manner, loss of juiciness and palatability is obviated.
The incorporation of collagen fibre into freshly prepared MEM as it emerges from the deboning machines, or after brief mixing to standardise batches, can be highly advantageous as the ,RM is at the optimum temperature and its meat proteins are at their most active state to bind with the collagen fibres.
Irradiation of the collagen fibres, or of the collagen raw material, or of the protein product containing the collagen fibres, particularly of the collagen fibres produced by the process described in this invention, with sterilising doses of ionising radiation (such as 5M rad) may cause an increase of tenderness of the product due to a decrease in the shrink temperature of the collagen fibres.
Collagen fibres or finely divided collagen fibres can be advantageously used as carriers for flavourings, colourings and other food additives, particularly for use in meat products, fish products, and other protein products, that are cooked prior to consumption.
Collagen fibres can be advantageously used as a source of protein and of amino acids for nutritional purposes in food, pet food, and animal feed, and also in fish food, where the flotation properties of the collagen fibre in water can be combined with the flavour and colour carrying properties of the collagen fibre in the preparation of complete fish food preparations.
Claims (4)
1. A process of treating food products in which collagen fibres
in a finely divided state are used in a predusting system for
protein products prior to their coating.
2. A process as claimed in claim 1 whereby protein products are
treated with a finely divided collagen fibre predusting
system which is heated to allow partial conversion to gelatin
and then coated with spices, seasonings, flavourings,
colourings, nuts, potato, dried fruit, sweet flavoured
coatings, and breadcrumbs, either alone or in combination.
3. A process as claimed in claim 1 whereby protein products are
treated with a finely divided collagen fibre predusting
system which is heated to allow partial conversion to gelatin
and to seal the surface, and is then batter coated and
enrobed with crumb, potato and nuts, either alone or in
combination.
4. X process of predusting protein products with collagen fibres
substantially as herein described.
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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GB9219324A GB2257891B (en) | 1988-06-01 | 1992-09-11 | Pre-dusting protein products |
Applications Claiming Priority (4)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB888812992A GB8812992D0 (en) | 1988-06-01 | 1988-06-01 | Improvements in/relating to protein products |
GB888812993A GB8812993D0 (en) | 1988-06-01 | 1988-06-01 | Improvements in/relating to production of protein products |
PCT/GB1989/000607 WO1989011799A2 (en) | 1988-06-01 | 1989-06-01 | Improvements in and relating to protein products |
GB9219324A GB2257891B (en) | 1988-06-01 | 1992-09-11 | Pre-dusting protein products |
Publications (3)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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GB9219324D0 GB9219324D0 (en) | 1992-10-28 |
GB2257891A true GB2257891A (en) | 1993-01-27 |
GB2257891B GB2257891B (en) | 1993-05-19 |
Family
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GB9219324A Expired - Fee Related GB2257891B (en) | 1988-06-01 | 1992-09-11 | Pre-dusting protein products |
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Cited By (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2001019198A1 (en) * | 1999-09-15 | 2001-03-22 | Deutsche Gelatine-Fabriken Stoess Ag | Method for surface treatment of fresh meat |
ES2245218A1 (en) * | 2003-02-14 | 2005-12-16 | Alonso Consejo Sup. Investig. Cientificas | Food products have cardio-salubrious bio-active compounds incorporated by means of addition of dried fruits, preferably nuts |
US8999412B2 (en) | 2008-10-29 | 2015-04-07 | General Mills, Inc. | Coated dried fruit and/or nuts and methods |
US8999413B2 (en) | 2008-10-29 | 2015-04-07 | General Mills, Inc. | Coated dried fruit and methods |
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US2290854A (en) * | 1941-05-14 | 1942-07-28 | Hoy Equipment Co | Simulated fat and method of preparing the same |
US2721142A (en) * | 1953-11-04 | 1955-10-18 | Armour & Co | Meat-coating composition and method |
US4511583A (en) * | 1983-07-18 | 1985-04-16 | General Mills, Inc. | Fried foods of reduced oil absorption and methods of preparation employing spray of film forming agent |
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- 1992-09-11 GB GB9219324A patent/GB2257891B/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
Patent Citations (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2290854A (en) * | 1941-05-14 | 1942-07-28 | Hoy Equipment Co | Simulated fat and method of preparing the same |
US2721142A (en) * | 1953-11-04 | 1955-10-18 | Armour & Co | Meat-coating composition and method |
US4511583A (en) * | 1983-07-18 | 1985-04-16 | General Mills, Inc. | Fried foods of reduced oil absorption and methods of preparation employing spray of film forming agent |
Cited By (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2001019198A1 (en) * | 1999-09-15 | 2001-03-22 | Deutsche Gelatine-Fabriken Stoess Ag | Method for surface treatment of fresh meat |
ES2245218A1 (en) * | 2003-02-14 | 2005-12-16 | Alonso Consejo Sup. Investig. Cientificas | Food products have cardio-salubrious bio-active compounds incorporated by means of addition of dried fruits, preferably nuts |
US8999412B2 (en) | 2008-10-29 | 2015-04-07 | General Mills, Inc. | Coated dried fruit and/or nuts and methods |
US8999413B2 (en) | 2008-10-29 | 2015-04-07 | General Mills, Inc. | Coated dried fruit and methods |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
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GB2257891B (en) | 1993-05-19 |
GB9219324D0 (en) | 1992-10-28 |
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