Abstract

The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of microwave pasteurization on the quality and shelf-life of low-sodium and intermediate-moisture Pacific saury. Microwave pasteurization was used to process low-sodium (1.07% ± 0.06%) and intermediate-moisture saury (moisture content 30% ± 2%, water activity 0.810 ± 0.010) to produce high-quality ready-to-eat food stored at room temperature. Retort pasteurization with the same thermal processing level of F90 = 10 min was used for comparison. Results showed that microwave pasteurization had significantly (p < 0.001) shorter processing times (9.23 ± 0.19 min) compared with traditional retort pasteurization (17.43 ± 0.32 min). The cook value (C) and thiobarbituric acid (TBARS) content of microwave-pasteurized saury were significantly lower than that of retort-pasteurized saury (p < 0.05). With more microbial inactivation, microwave pasteurization brought better overall texture than retort processing. After 7 days of storage at 37 °C, the total plate count (TPC) and TBARS of microwave pasteurized saury still met the edible standard, while the TPC of retort pasteurized saury no longer did. These results showed that the combined processing of microwave pasteurization and mild drying (Aw < 0.85) could produce high-quality ready-to-eat saury products. These results indicate a new methodology for producing high-quality products stored at room temperature.

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