The editorial department of Science and Technology of Food Industry
Doi
Abstract
To investigate the effect of salt concentration on the quality and myofibrillar protein of crisp grass carp fillets before and after a single freeze-thaw cycle, fillets were marinated in 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0 mol/L NaCl solutions at 4 ℃ for 2 h. Following a 24 h freezing period, water-holding capacity, color, lipid oxidation, carbonyl content, total sulfhydryl content, SDS-PAGE profiles, microstructure, and myofibrillar protein structure were evaluated. It was found that fillets retained water better when the salt concentration ranged from 0.5 to 0.75 mol/L. The fillets exhibited a relatively tight tissue structure before and after freezing and thawing when the salt concentration was less than 1.00 mol/L. With increasing salt solution concentration, the L* value of fish fillets after freeze-thawing was higher than before freeze-thawing. Lipid oxidation and protein oxidation of fish fillets increased after freezing and thawing. SDS-PAGE analysis revealed that myofibrillar protein degradation increased before freezing and thawing with salt concentrations >1.5 mol/L. The degree of myofibrillar protein degradation remained stable after freezing and thawing when the salt concentration was 0.75 mol/L. In conclusion, when the salt concentration is ≤0.75 mol/L, the quality of crisp grass carp fillets changes little before and after freezing and thawing, which can delay the oxidative degradation of proteins