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Rapid Evaporative Ionisation Mass Spectrometry fingerprinting can discriminate lamb meat due to different ageing methods and levels of dehydration

Dry-ageing is a technique for developing characteristic dry-aged flavour through the interplay of dehydration, lipid oxidation and microbial activities. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that the extent of drying influences the metabolite profile and the final flavour of lamb using an “Age-and-Dry” regime; and that Rapid Evaporative Ionisation Mass Spectrometry (REIMS) fingerprinting can be used to discriminate the metabolic fingerprints of lambs due to ageing methods and dehydration levels. Lamb loins (n = 60) were dehydrated with low (12%), medium (17%) and high (22%) weight losses and compared with the wet-aged equivalents using REIMS and evaluated by 12-member sensory panel. Orthogonal projection to latent structures-discriminant analysis (OPLS-DA) models based on 1400 tentatively identified m/z features were obtained for ageing methods (Q2 > 0.95) and dehydration levels (Q2 > 0.82) with high discrimination accuracy. Increased concentrations of dipeptides and metabolites associated with energy metabolism were observed in aged-and-dried lamb meat which supports the umami and savoury taste perceived by the sensory panel. A reduced concentration of polyunsaturated fatty acids with more aldehydes was observed in aged-and-dried lamb meat contributing to the nutty, roasted, and fatty flavour notes detected by the sensory panellists in these samples compared to the wet-aged.

Funding

SSIF: Meat Futures - profiting from global food trends

History

Rights statement

© 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Publication date

2022-11-21

Project number

  • 67372

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

Elsevier

Journal title

Journal of Proteomics

ISSN

1874-3919

Volume/issue number

272

Page numbers

104771

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