Title of article
Conservation of water for washing beef heads at harvest
Author/Authors
R.E. DeOtte Jr.، نويسنده , , R.E. and Spivey، نويسنده , , K.S. and Galloway، نويسنده , , H.O. and Lawrence، نويسنده , , T.E.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
6
From page
371
To page
376
Abstract
The objective of this research was to develop methods to conserve water necessary to cleanse beef heads prior to USDA–FSIS inspection. This was to be accomplished by establishing a baseline for the minimum amount of water necessary to adequately wash a head and application of image analysis to provide an objective measure of head cleaning. Twenty-one beef heads were manually washed during the harvest process. An average 18.75 L (2.49 SD) and a maximum of 23.88 L were required to cleanse the heads to USDA–FSIS standards. Digital images were captured before and after manual washing then evaluated for percentage red saturation using commercially available image analysis software. A decaying exponential curve extracted from these data indicated that as wash water increased beyond 20 L the impact on red saturation decreased. At 4σ from the mean of 18.75 L, red saturation is 16.0 percent, at which logistic regression analysis indicates 99.994 percent of heads would be accepted for inspection, or less than 1 head in 15,000 would be rejected. Reducing to 3σ would increase red saturation to 27.6 percent, for which 99.730 percent of heads likely would be accepted (less than 1 in 370 would be rejected).
Keywords
beef , Carcass , Carcass wash , Water Conservation , Inspection criteria , Image analysis
Journal title
Meat Science
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Meat Science
Record number
1489682
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