Quality Changes in Deep-Sea Shrimp (Aristeus alcocki) During Ice Storage: Biochemical and Organoleptic Changes
Quality Changes in Deep-Sea Shrimp (Aristeus alcocki) During Ice Storage: Biochemical and Organoleptic Changes
Date
2019
Authors
Thimmappa, M. H.
Reddy, A. Manjunatha
Prabhu, R. M.
Elavarasan, K.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer
Abstract
The exploration of deep-sea fisheries for food uses is recommended worldwide and particularly in India. In the present work, quality changes in deep-sea shrimp, Aristeus alcocki, during the ice storage period of 7 days have been studied. Quality indicators such as trimethylamine nitrogen, total volatile base nitrogen (TVBN), peroxide value, free fatty
acid value, pH and total plate count increased significantly (P\0.05) during the storage period and reached the value of
4.5 mgN/100 g, 18.88 mgN/100 g, 4.09 % of lipids as oleic acid, 17.73 milliequivalent of O2 /kg, 8.05 and 1.93 9 105 cfu/
g at the end of the study, respectively. Other biochemical parameters such as a-amino nitrogen, non-protein nitrogen and
water soluble protein contents were found to decrease significantly (P\0.05). Changes in sensory attributes had significant
correlation with quality indicating parameters. It was found that during ice storage, A. alcocki retained the prime
quality up to 4 days; thereafter, the rate of quality deterioration was high and reached the lower margin of overall acceptability on the 7th day. The overall acceptability score of 4.20 on the 7th day, indicating that the shrimps were acceptable by the panelist. The total plate count up to 7 days of ice storage was low indicated that the quality deterioration in deep-sea shrimp was mainly because of biochemical deterioration rather than the microbial putrefaction.
Description
Keywords
Deep-Sea shrimp, Aristeus alcocki, Ice storage, Shelf life, Fish quality
Citation
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40003-019-00397-8