Title: What is Meat Quality
1What is Meat Quality?
- Bob Mikesell
- Penn State Department of Dairy and Animal Science
2Eating Experience
Safety
Meat Yield
Wholesomeness
3What Do You Think Makes Meat Taste Great?
4What Can You Do to Make Sure the Meat From Your
Animal Tastes Great?
5What Makes High Value Meat?
- Quality
- Color
- Texture
- Marbling
- etc.
Lets look at beef first
6Beef Yield Grade
- Estimate of amount of meat
- Fat thickness over the ribeye
- kidney, pelvic, and heart fat
- rib-eye area
- hot carcass weight
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9Beef Yield Grades
- YG Range 1 (lean, heavily muscled) to 5 (fat,
light muscled). - Higher carcass weight worse YG
- Higher kidney, pelvic and heart fat worse YG.
10YG 5
YG 3
YG 1
Photos Courtesy of Meat Evaluation Handbook,
available from the American Meat Science
Association (www.meatscience.org)
11Beef Quality Grades
- Higher grade for more fat flecks in the ribeye
muscle - Also uses age, color, and lean texture to assign
final grades - Beef quality grades refer to how good the cooked
meat will taste
12USDA Beef Quality Grades
Most Desirable
MARBL ING
- Young Cattle
- USDA Prime
- USDA Choice
- USDA Select
- USDA Standard
- Old Cattle
- USDA Commercial
- USDA Utility
- USDA Cutter
- USDA Canner
Least Desirable
13Marbling Degree Pictures
Photos Courtesy of Meat Evaluation Handbook,
available from the American Meat Science
Association (www.meatscience.org)
14USDA Beef Quality Grades - Availability
USDA Prime - 2.0
USDA Choice - 48
USDA Select - 47.4
Source 2000 USDA
15How do you age a beef carcass?
- You ask the bones
- Thoracic Vertebrae (buttons)
- Lumbar Vertebrae
- Sacral Vertebrae
- Ribs
- Aitch Bone
16Fat and lean color
Photos Courtesy of Meat Evaluation Handbook,
available from the American Meat Science
Association (www.meatscience.org)
17Enough about Beef..
18Lamb Yield Grades
Body wall thickness, measured 5 inches from the
spine between The 12th and 13th ribs
Back Fat, measured at the Center of the rib eye
between The 12th and 13th ribs.
19- Rib Eye Area (at the 12th rib)
- USDA does not measure muscling to determine YG,
but many carcass evaluation contests do - Normal range 2 in2 to 3 in2
- Usually ribeye area is adjusted for Carcass Wt.
- The grid used has 20 dots per in2
- If possible, both sides are measured to determine
the average ribeye area
20Lamb Quality Grading
- Quality Grades - predicts eating quality
- Prime
- Choice
- Good - Utility -Cull
- Factors used for Quality Grades
- Quality
- Maturity (age of animal)
- Confirmation
21Photos Courtesy of Meat Evaluation Handbook,
available from the American Meat Science
Association (www.meatscience.org)
22Quality factors
- Fat streaking in the flank
- (primary and secondary)
- Feathering
- Streaks of fat between the ribs
- Fullness and firmness of the flank
- Marbling intra-muscular fat
- All indicate the lamb has been fed a high energy
diet and should taste good.
23Photos Courtesy of Meat Evaluation Handbook,
available from the American Meat Science
Association (www.meatscience.org)
24Choice Flank Streaking
25Prime Flank Streaking
26Marbling intra-muscular fat
27Lamb Maturity
Break Joint (left) Breaks at the break
joint Evidenced by rough, reddish area where
broken. Spool Joint (right) Growth plate has
fused and will not break appears much smoother
and whiter. These usually fuse at about 12
months
28Confirmation
Conformation is simply the shape or formof the
carcass and indicates a high energy diet which
makes the meat taste better. The quality grade
is adjusted for Conformation to determine the
final Quality Grade
Avg Avg Avg Prime Choice Good
29And then there are pigs
30Pork Carcass Yield
- Largely based on 10th rib fat depth
- Loineye size important too.
- Is there such a thing as too lean?
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32What is Pork Quality?
- Pork quality is the things that make the pork
taste good. - Color
- Marbling
- Water-Binding Capacity
- Firmness
33Photos Courtesy of Meat Evaluation Handbook,
available from the American Meat Science
Association (www.meatscience.org)
34PSE
RFN
DFD
Color Drip Loss Relationship
35Firmness
- Evaluate on a cut surface (loineye or ham)
- Firm pork retains shape
- Soft pork deforms easily and sags
- Better eating quality with firmer pork
36Handling Effects on Quality
- Poor Pre-Slaughter Handling
PSE
Bruising
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38Examples of Quality Problems. Beef
392 mls 7-Way at Branding Time (50 Days of Age)
NCA/BQA - 1995
405 mls 7-Way at Branding Time (50 Days of Age)
NCA/BQA - 1995
41Vitamin A D
Injected at 50 Days of Age
NCA/BQA - 1995
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43These are NOT Pancakes
44Its Your Turn.
- Measure fat depth at correct location
- Lay grid on surface
- Count dots
- Divide number of dots by 20 to get square inches.