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Influence of Cooking, Storage Period, and Re-heating on Production of Cholesterol Oxides in Chicken Meat

The objective of present study was to investigate the effect of cooking and their combinations with re-heating methods on the formation of cholesterol oxidation products (COPs) in stored chicken thigh meat. Pan roasting, steaming, oven grilling, charcoal grilling, and microwaving were used for cooki...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Korean journal for food science of animal resources 2018, Vol.38 (3), p.433-441
Main Authors: Choe, Juhui, Min, Joong-Seok, Lee, Sang-Ok, Khan, Muhammad Issa, Yim, Dong Gyun, Lee, Mooha, Jo, Cheorun
Format: Article
Language:Korean
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Summary:The objective of present study was to investigate the effect of cooking and their combinations with re-heating methods on the formation of cholesterol oxidation products (COPs) in stored chicken thigh meat. Pan roasting, steaming, oven grilling, charcoal grilling, and microwaving were used for cooking. Re-heating of samples was done using the same cooking methods or microwaving after 3 and 6 d of refrigerated storage. Cooking and re-heating resulted in reduction of crude fat and cholesterol contents of chicken thigh meat depending on storage period before re-heating. Cooking and storage period had no influence on the total amount of COPs. The highest total amount of COPs was observed in meat samples cooked by steaming and reheated by microwaving after 6 d of storage, which showed similar value to raw chicken meat stored for 6 days. However, different re-heating methods formed different types of COPs depending on storage period before re-heating. The high amount (p
ISSN:1225-8563
2234-246X