Co-products from the Atlantic salmon filleting industry – Their properties, stability and potential as human food ingredients
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28946Date
2023-03-20Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Ulleberg, Didrik; Sletten, Ingrid Bøe; Jakobsen, Anita Nordeng; Svenning, Jon Brage; Lerfall, JørgenAbstract
The present study impacts the growing knowledge about co-products obtained from the primary processing of
Atlantic salmon (Salmo Salar L.) as food ingredients by highlighting their microbial and chemical composition
and stability. The proximate composition varied between the co-products from the fatty belly-flap (34% lipid,
15% protein) to the leaner deboned meat (10% fat, 22% protein) (p < 0.001), whereas no differences were
observed between the superior and production qualities (p > 0.31). However, the co-products from the processing of production quality salmon had a higher microbial load of psychotropic aerobic-, H2S-producing- and
Pseudomonas spp. bacteria than those of superior quality salmon origin (4.0, 5.2, and 4.3 log CFU/g units higher,
respectively). Fatty co-products, such as the belly flap, were especially susceptible to ATP degradation, giving
higher Hx concentrations after 7/10 days of ice-storage than leaner fractions (p < 0.001). Moreover, a positive
correlation between the lipid level and degradation of ATP was observed (r = 0.62, p = 0.006). To conclude, coproducts from superior and production quality salmon contain valuable nutrients suitable for human consumption. However, the co-products are vulnerable to microbial and chemical deterioration, presumably due to
disruption of biological membranes during processing, and should be handled accordingly.
Publisher
ElsevierCitation
Ulleberg D, Sletten IB, Jakobsen A, Svenning JB, Lerfall J. Co-products from the Atlantic salmon filleting industry – Their properties, stability and potential as human food ingredients. Lebensmittel-Wissenschaft + Technologie. 2023;180Metadata
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