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Measures of Tenderness: Difference between revisions

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'''Tenderness'''
'''Tenderness'''


Measures of tenderness are necessary to ensure overall eating satisfaction of beef produced from a carcass. Tenderness tends to be softer and easier to chew thus making it more palatable.  
Measures of tenderness are used to quantify expected overall eating satisfaction of beef produced from a carcass. Beef that is more tender, or softer and easier to chew, is deemed to be more palatable by consumers.  


Two tenderness testing protocols, '''Warner-Bratzler Shear Force''' and '''Slice Shear Force''', are generally used in the beef industry today. Both are objective tests that adequately sort the final product into accurate levels of tenderness acceptable by the consumer.
Two tenderness testing protocols, '''Warner-Bratzler Shear Force''' and '''Slice Shear Force''', are generally used in the beef industry today. Both are objective tests that adequately score beef and can be used for sorting the final product into levels of tenderness perceived by the consumer.

Revision as of 12:08, 31 October 2019

Tenderness

Measures of tenderness are used to quantify expected overall eating satisfaction of beef produced from a carcass. Beef that is more tender, or softer and easier to chew, is deemed to be more palatable by consumers.

Two tenderness testing protocols, Warner-Bratzler Shear Force and Slice Shear Force, are generally used in the beef industry today. Both are objective tests that adequately score beef and can be used for sorting the final product into levels of tenderness perceived by the consumer.