Chapter 3: Animal Products - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 20
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 3: Animal Products

Description:

Title: Chapter 1: Animal Agriculture Author: dKenealy Last modified by: MACNet Created Date: 6/6/2002 5:38:29 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:409
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 21
Provided by: dKe54
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 3: Animal Products


1
Chapter 3 Animal Products
  • Chapter overview
  • Chapter 3 reviews the history, availability, and
    processing of animal products, including
  • composition and contribution to the diet
  • trends in consumption of animal products
  • preservation and safety of food products
  • grading of animal products

2
Primary Nutritional Reason for Consuming Animal
Products Protein
  • Relatively high amounts of protein as compared to
    grains and vegetables
  • High biological value (quality) of animal protein
  • Good to excellent ratios of dietary essential
    amino acids, such as lysine

3
Composition of Selected Products
4
Nutritional Concerns Expressed about Animal
Products
  • Amount of fat (caloric density) of animal
    products
  • Level of saturated fat in certain animal products
  • Concentration of cholesterol in animal products
  • Incidence of protein allergy and lactose
    intolerance

5
FDA Required Labeling
  • Serving size and servings per container
  • Per serving total calories, calories from fat,
    and grams of fat, protein, carbohydrate, fiber
    and sugars
  • Percentage of the RDA per serving for each of the
    nutrients listed above plus vitamins A, C,
    thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, and minerals calcium
    and phosphorus

6
Typical Methods of Food Preservation
  • High temperature
  • Pasteurization kills spoilage and pathogenic
    organisms (1864 Pasteur)
  • Longer temperatures and times can sterilize foods
  • Low temperature
  • Refrigeration or freezing inhibits microbial
    growth

7
Typical Methods of Food Preservation
  • Dehydration
  • Air drying
  • Chemical preservatives
  • Inhibitors of organism growth such as salt,
    sodium nitrite, and propionates
  • Bactofugation
  • Removing bacteria from liquids by centrifugation

8
Typical Methods of Food Preservation
  • Environmental preservation
  • Sealed or evacuated containers, generally linked
    to one of the treatment methods listed
  • Low pH
  • Fermentation or acid addition inhibits microbial
    growth
  • Irradiation (or cold sterilization)
  • Use of low-level ionizing radiation doses to
    pasteurize or sterilize

9
Food Safety Regulation
  • Who Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) of
    the USDA maintains responsibility for food
    labeling and safety
  • How Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points
    (HACCP) procedures and performance standards

10
FSIS - Essential Elements of Control
  • All state and federally inspected food plants
    must have an HACCP program
  • Plants must have written sanitation standard
    operating procedures (SSOP)
  • FSIS uses Salmonella detection on raw red meat
    and poultry as a control standard
  • FSIS uses E. coli tests on carcasses as
    verification of process control (fecal)

11
Steps in Developing an HACCP Plan
  • Identify potential hazards likely to cause
    illness or injury
  • Locate steps in the process where there is an
    opportunity to prevent food contamination
  • Set limits on the process that will ensure safety
  • Monitor and measure the process and keep records
  • Pre-establish corrective actions in case of a
    failure

12
Specific Meat Preservation Techniques
  • Curing - coating, immersing, or injecting meat
    with agents that preserve meat, generally done
    now to impart desired flavors example agent
    salt
  • Smoking - combining smoke and heat to destroy
    bacteria and dehydrate the product surface
  • Canning - thermal processing followed by
    packaging in sealed containers (Appert)

13
Pasteurization of Eggs and Milk
  • Eggs for liquid sale (for example to be used in
    food service) are generally treated at 140
    degrees F for 3.5 minutes
  • Milk is generally pasteurized in an automated
    flow system through a grid maintained at 161
    degrees F with a 15 second transit time

14
Grading Animal Products
  • Grades of animal products are based on chemical,
    physical, and sensory characteristics
  • Grades are generally a quality guide to the
    customer and not a direct indication of safety
  • For example a quality grade of beef is derived
    primarily based upon intramuscular fat content

15
Egg Grades and Grading
  • Grades are determined by evaluation of internal
    and external quality of the egg
  • Internal quality determined by candling
    includes consideration of size of air cell, shape
    of yolk, and absence of foreign bodies such as
    meat or blood spots
  • External quality includes shape, cleanliness, and
    integrity of the shell

16
Egg Grades and Size
  • Grades are AA, A, B, C
  • Grade is independent of size
  • Size categories are based upon weight per dozen
  • Large size eggs are are the most common in the
    grocery store and weigh 24 ounces per dozen

17
Grading Milk Products
  • Milk grading reflects a different evaluation than
    meat, egg, or wool grading
  • Milk grades do reflect the sanitary care taken in
    on-farm production of the product
  • Unlike other animal products, milk producing
    farms are inspected regularly and must comply
    with very specific UDSA code

18
Grading Milk Products
  • Farms in most US states produce milk for either
    Grade A or B sale
  • But, products manufactured from milk may fall
    under a grading system that is separate from the
    farm grade
  • Fluid milk is graded A only
  • Butter may be graded AA, A, or B
  • Cheese may be graded AA, A, B, or C

19
Grading Meat Products
  • Carcass grades for red meat fall under two
    differing grading systems
  • Yield or cutability grading evaluating amount of
    external and internal fat versus amount of lean
    muscle higher grades are generally leaner
  • Quality grading evaluating the intramuscular fat
    quantity higher grades are generally fatter

20
Meat Safety versus Quality
  • Inspection of meat products for wholesomeness is
    mandatory
  • Grading of meat products is optional
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com