• Title/Summary/Keyword: Small red muscle fish

Search Result 3, Processing Time 0.02 seconds

Development of Conditioning for Small Red Muscle Fish Using Kimchi Seasoning Ingredients and Organic acids 1. Chemical Changes during Conditioning in Conditioned Saury with Kimchi Seasoning and Organic acids (김치양념과 유기산을 이용한 소형 적색육어 조미숙성제품 개발 1. 꽁치 조미제품의 숙성 중 화학적 변화)

  • JEONG In-Hak;LIM Yeong-Seon
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
    • /
    • v.34 no.4
    • /
    • pp.309-314
    • /
    • 2001
  • In order to promote the consumption of small red muscle fish, such as saury, sardine, herring, etc., a new conditioning technique to soften backbone and small bones was investigated by using kimchi seasoning ingredients and organic acids. In the conditioning process, various chemical changes were examined during 60 days at 15 days intervals, The decrease of moisture content and the increase of salt concentration in seasoned fish meat were good correlated respectively. In the dry salt conditioning, the moisture content was more rapidly decreased than wet salt conditioning. The pH of fish meat during conditioning were more slowly decreased in dry salting than in wet salting. The VBN contents were suppressed under 30 mg/100 g in dry salt conditioning during 60 days at $5^{\circ}C$. The addition of rice bran in dry salting was effective on retarding lipid oxidation because the TBA value was most effectively retarded.

  • PDF

Residues of Antibiotics in Wild and Cultured Fishes Collected from Coast of Korea (시중 유통 자연산 및 양식산 활어의 항생제 잔류)

  • Shim, Kil-Bo;Mok, Jong-Soo;Jo, Mi-Ra;Kim, Poong-Ho;Lee, Tae-Seek;Kim, Ji-Hoe;Cho, Young-Je
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
    • /
    • v.43 no.1
    • /
    • pp.12-17
    • /
    • 2010
  • Wild and cultured fish including olive flounder, sea bass, rock bream, yellowtail, gray mullet, gizzard shad, black rockfish, red seabream and squid were collected from a fish market located on the coast of Korea, and the antibiotic content of their muscle was investigated. Tetracycline group antibiotics were not detected in the 108 individuals of 9 species of wild fish. However, oxytetracycline (OTC) and tetracycline(TC) were detected in some samples of the 111 individuals in 7 cultured live fish species. The detected ranges of OTC and TC were ND~ 0.06 and ND~ 0.03, respectively. Five different fluoroquinolone antibiotics were also tested for, but were not detected in the wild fish species. Only small amount of criprofloxacin(ND~0.029 mg/kg) were detected in a few cultured fish samples. Oxolinic acid was not detected in either wild and cultured fish samples. Results showed that even very low levels of antibiotics could be detected by the testing methods used. Antibiotics were identified in a few fish samples but levels were far below the maximum allowable limits of the Korean Food Code, and the safety of fish being sold in markets, with regard to antibiotic levels, was confirmed.

Development of Conditioning for Small Red Muscle Fish Using Kimchi Seasoning Ingredients and Organic acids 2. Sensory Evaluation in Conditioned Saury with Kimchi Seasoning and organic acids (김치양념과 유기산을 이용한 소형 적색육어 조미숙성제품 개발 2. 꽁치 조미숙성제품의 관능적 품질평가)

  • LIM Yeong-Seon;JEONG In-Hak
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
    • /
    • v.34 no.4
    • /
    • pp.315-319
    • /
    • 2001
  • In odor to improve preference to small red muscle fish such as saury, sardine, herring, etc., a new seasoning and conditioning process was experimented using kimchi seasoning ingredients and organic acids. The sensory profiles during 60 days of conditioning at $5^{\circ}C$ showed better results in dry salting than in wet salting. The additions of rice bran in dry salting gave advantageous effect on the sensory evaluation of conditioned saury with kimchi seasoning. The counts of remained fine bones and hardness of backbones after 60 days of conditioning were about $50\%\;and\;23\%$ in wet salted product, and $38\sim41\%$ and $11\sim14\%$ in dry salted product respectively, as compared to raw saury, The decomposition of protein to amino acids was more severe in wet salted product than in dry salted product. Histidine, leucine, glutamic acid, alanine, and valine in order were abundant in wet salted product, but histidine, glutamic acid, arginine, leucine, and alanine in order were contained plentifully in dry salted product.

  • PDF