Abstract

This paper examines the gel-forming ability of minced muscle of sardine - caught from the Bay of Biscay and the Mediterranean at different seasons - kept in frozen storage for 150 days. The influence of atmospheric and vacuum packaging on the gel-forming capacity of minced muscle, and the addition of tocopherol as antyoxidant were also studied. From the outset of frozen storage, Mediterranean sardine muscle exhibited greater gel strength than that from the Bay of Biscay. Sardines from the Bay of Biscay caught in November produced the best gels from any area. Generally, when frozen muscle was vacuum-packed, rancidity was less and gel strength improved. Activity of tocopherol does not seem sufficiently clear. In nearly all cases, gel strength was greater the longer the muscle was kept in frozen storage, although in Bay of Biscay sardine muscle there was progressive myofibrillar protein aggregation throughout the storage.

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