Reduction of red blood spots in cooked marinated chicken breast meat by combined microwave heating and steaming
Matthanee Jantaranikorn, Kanjana Thumanu, Jirawat Yongsawatdigul
Abstract
One of the defects commonly found in cooked marinated chicken breast products is a red blood spot (RBS), which is caused by undercooked blood in vessels. This problem was alleviated by microwave (MW) pre-heating for 6 to 7 min, followed by steaming. RBS formation decreased when samples were heated to a core temperature of 80°C and were completely eliminated at a core temperature of 82°C and 85°C when a MW pre-heating step was applied for 7 min. Based on synchrotron-based Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (SR-FTIR), blood remaining in the blood vessel had a lower α-helical content when samples were cooked by the combination of MW heating and steaming as compared with those prepared by steaming alone (P < 0.05). MW pre-heating decreased cooking time by 28 to 48% as compared with steaming alone. Heating regimes had no effect on cooking loss, pH, water-holding capacity, and shear force. MW pre-heating for 7 min followed by steaming to a core temperature of 82°C appeared to be an effective heating regime to reduce the occurrence of RBS, with acceptable cooking loss.