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Quality of comminuted and formed chicken meat products as affected by addition of chicken skin and mechanically deboned meat as addition binder / Abeer Ezzeldin Hassan Ibrahim ; Supervised Taha M. Nouman , Mohamed M.T. Emara , Azza H. Elbaba

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: Cairo : Abeer Ezz Eldin Hassan Ibrahim , 2020Description: 51 P. : charts , facsimiles ; 25cmOther title:
  • جودة لحوم الدواجن المشكلة و تٲثرها بٳضافة جلد الدجاج و لحم الدجاج المستخلص ميكانيكيا كٳضافة رابطة [Added title page title]
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  • Issued also as CD
Dissertation note: Thesis (M.Sc.) - Cairo University - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Department of Food Hygiene and Control Summary: The main objective of the current study was to investigate the safety and quality of marketed chicken burger. Moreover, the effect of addition of mechanically separated meat (MSM), comminuted skin and skin emulsion to chicken burger formulations on the different quality attributes of chicken burger during frozen storage was studied. To achieve these objectives, ninety chicken burgers sample were collected randomly from different processing plants, in Egypt and analyzed for determination of sensory, chemical and microbiological quality attributes. Furthermore, three-trial based experiment was conducted to evaluate the effect of addition of MSM, comminuted skin and skin emulsion at different levels (20 and 50%) on the proximate chemical composition, eating quality characteristics, bacterial load and sensory quality of chicken burger during frozen storage. The results revealed that most chicken burger samples had bad sensory panel scores, low moisture and protein contents.However, the samples had higher aerobic bacterial and psychrotrophic counts as well as Salmonella spp. was isolated from them. The results also indicated that addition of mechanically separated meat had negative effects on the different quality attributes of experimentally produced burgers, while the thermally treated skin emulsion showed the lowest deviations in their quality parameters. Moreover, both increasing the rate of MSM addition and storage period at 4{u00BA}C for 3 months adversely affected the organoleptic and eating quality characteristics of chicken burger
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Thesis Thesis قاعة الرسائل الجامعية - الدور الاول المكتبة المركزبة الجديدة - جامعة القاهرة Cai01.10.06.M.Sc.2020.Ab.Q (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan 01010110081788000
CD - Rom CD - Rom مخـــزن الرســائل الجـــامعية - البدروم المكتبة المركزبة الجديدة - جامعة القاهرة Cai01.10.06.M.Sc.2020.Ab.Q (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 81788.CD Not for loan 01020110081788000

Thesis (M.Sc.) - Cairo University - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Department of Food Hygiene and Control

The main objective of the current study was to investigate the safety and quality of marketed chicken burger. Moreover, the effect of addition of mechanically separated meat (MSM), comminuted skin and skin emulsion to chicken burger formulations on the different quality attributes of chicken burger during frozen storage was studied. To achieve these objectives, ninety chicken burgers sample were collected randomly from different processing plants, in Egypt and analyzed for determination of sensory, chemical and microbiological quality attributes. Furthermore, three-trial based experiment was conducted to evaluate the effect of addition of MSM, comminuted skin and skin emulsion at different levels (20 and 50%) on the proximate chemical composition, eating quality characteristics, bacterial load and sensory quality of chicken burger during frozen storage. The results revealed that most chicken burger samples had bad sensory panel scores, low moisture and protein contents.However, the samples had higher aerobic bacterial and psychrotrophic counts as well as Salmonella spp. was isolated from them. The results also indicated that addition of mechanically separated meat had negative effects on the different quality attributes of experimentally produced burgers, while the thermally treated skin emulsion showed the lowest deviations in their quality parameters. Moreover, both increasing the rate of MSM addition and storage period at 4{u00BA}C for 3 months adversely affected the organoleptic and eating quality characteristics of chicken burger

Issued also as CD

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