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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2021
Several organic acids have been accepted by the EU as non toxic food grade additives, to control spoilage and maintain fresh appearance in raw meat. Research has confirmed the antibacterial effect of certain organic acids such as acetic, propionic, sorbic, fumaric and citric acids on fresh beef (Anderson 1992; Dickson and Siragusa, 1994, Podolak et al., 1996). However many of these trials have been focused on spraying the acids onto the surface of meat, while little attention has been given to evaluating their effectiveness when mixed into ground beef. The work described here deals with the effect of a mixture of organic acids on the microbial contamination and appearance of minced meat.
Forequarter muscles from three beef carcasses were removed 48h after slaughter. The meat from each carcass was cut into cubes and kept separate during storage for a further 24h at 2 °C. Half of the meat from each carcass was treated with a commercial preparation (BOMBAL, Van Hees; FISPAK Ltd.) containing the following organic acids; sodium acetate, sodium ascorbate, citric acid and ascorbic acid at a rate of 5g BOMBAL/kg of diced meat.