Effects of salt and rice flour concentration on microbial diversity and the quality of sour meat, a Chinese traditional meat
Mengyang Liu, Xinping Lin, Jing Yang, Xu Yan, Chaofan Ji, Huipeng Liang, Sufang Zhang, Liang Dong
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of salt (3% and 6% w/w) and rice flour (10% and 20% w/w) addition in sour meat, a traditional Chinese fermented meat. It was found that salt has greater effect than rice flour addition in spontaneous fermentation. Low-salt groups had lower pH and higher titratable total acid. In the low-salt groups, the dominant genera were <em>Lactobacillus</em> and <em>Lactococcus</em>, whereas <em>Staphylococcus</em>, <em>Weissella</em>, and <em>Tetragenococcus</em> were dominant in the high-salt groups. Higher total free amino acids and essential amino acids, organic acids, hexanoic acid ethyl ester and octanoic acid ethyl ester were found in the low-salt groups. The RDA analysis revealed that <em>Lactococcus </em>was closely related to product quality, with the S3F10 (3% salt and 10% rice flour) group outperforming the others in the sensory evaluation. Therefore, 3% salt and 10% rice flour were considered more appropriate for the production of healthy and tasty fermented sour meats.