dave pethick lis pannier & the sheep crc meat science team

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The latest eating quality science managing intramuscular fat and tenderness to improve the consumer eating experience Dave Pethick Lis Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

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The latest eating quality science managing intramuscular fat and tenderness to improve the consumer eating experience. Dave Pethick Lis Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team. Topics. Meat Standards Australia – history/current New traits Shear force tenderness Intramuscular fat - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

The latest eating quality science managing intramuscular fat and tenderness to

improve the consumer eating experience

Dave PethickLis Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Page 2: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Topics1. Meat Standards Australia – history/current2. New traits

• Shear force tenderness• Intramuscular fat• MSA consumer taste panel

3. Predicting consumer taste panel response4. MSA lamb Mark II – what it might look like ?

Page 3: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Where have we come from ?

Page 4: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Lamb loin tenderness in the 90’s1997/98 retail audit – Safari et al. (2002) n = 907

Page 5: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

MSA - underpinned by consumer testing• Tenderness (0 – 100)• Juiciness• Liking of flavour• Overall liking

Unsatisfactory Good every day Better than every day Premium

Science is recognised world wide

Page 6: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team
Page 7: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Real people – real answers !

Page 8: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Critical Control Points

Value addingCooking method

Consumer

Pre-slaughter control

GeneticsSheep age

Growth path (feed type & finishing)

Pre-slaughter stress

Ageing of meatCut/ primal

Hang

Post-slaughter control

Chillers

Juiciness FlavourTenderness Overall Liking

Conception

Selling methodIntramuscular fat

Page 9: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Meat Standards Australia lamb

Page 10: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team
Page 11: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

MSA lamb - current

• Consumer focused model to underpin the eating quality of lamb

• It is a simple ‘in/out’ system with ‘rules’ for– Producers– Processors– Retailers

Page 12: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Requirements eg

• Fat score - GR ≥ 6mm (≥score 2)• No eruption of permanent incisor teeth• pH x temperature requirements (e-stimulation)• Aging of meat for 5 days• ………

Page 13: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Change is possibleMSA data (2005) n = 806, optimal processing, fat & pH

compliant

Page 14: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

What’s missing ?

• Continuous improvement• Genetic effects• Carcase grading• Cuts grading

Page 15: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

The Information Nucleus(500 sires, 10,000 slaughter lambs)

DORPER

Page 16: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

• Juiciness, flavour, tenderness• 4.2 ± 0.04% (Xbred mean)• Ideal 4-6%• Mod/high heritability• Called marbling in beef

New traits (i) intramuscular fat

Page 17: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

• Mechanical measure of Tenderness (kg or Newtons)• Higher value = tougher• Measured after electrical stimulation and 5 days aging• Gene markers for this trait in sheep (& beef)• Intramuscular fat reduces it• Mod/high heritability

New traits (ii) shear force tenderness

Page 18: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Important correlations – genetic(2 years data 183 sires, 4,110 progeny)

• LMY vs IMF -ve mod/high BAD

• LMY vs SF5 +ve mod BAD

• IMF vs SF5 -ve high GOOD

LMY = lean meat yieldSF5 = Shear force tenderness day 5IMF = intramuscular fat

Page 19: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

So single focused selection on LMY will:

• Increase shear force (tougher)• Reduce intramuscular fat (less juicy, less flavour &

tougher)• BUT LMY is totally important for lamb

So how can we protect eating quality ?

Page 20: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Evolve an MSA Mark II

• Evolve an enhanced MSA lamb model• Incorporating new Sheep CRC information• Manage yield and eating quality• Cuts grading

Page 21: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Eating quality• But what does shear force and IMF mean to

consumers ?• Will they pay more ?• ……

Page 22: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

MSA Lamb mark IIGrade cuts into:

2* - Unsatisfactory3* - Good every day4* - Better than every day5* - Premium

Page 23: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

n Ungrade 3* 4* 5*

Mean 1,858 49% 100% 147% 200%

Willingness to pay data(Price relative to 3*, n = number consumers)

Australian consumers - lamb

3 star 4 star 5 star

Page 24: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Sire variation – consumer tenderness(Pannier et al. unpublished)

Loin tenderness

Tops

ide

tend

erne

ss

97 sires, 745 lambs, 2 cuts per lamb, grilled

Page 25: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Sire variation – consumer tenderness

Loin tenderness

Tops

ide

tend

erne

ss

16 points

12 points

Page 26: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Likely sufficient to change rating

2* unsatisfactory3* good every day4* better than every day5* premium

Page 27: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Sire variation – consumer tenderness

Loin tenderness

Tops

ide

tend

erne

ss3* 5*4*

Page 28: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Sire variation – consumer tenderness

Loin tenderness

Tops

ide

tend

erne

ss

3*

2*

Page 29: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Remember - this is with ‘optimal’ processing

• All carcases had e-stimulation• Product aged for 5 days

Page 30: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

What did consumers say about the 2 cuts ?

Distribution of grades (745 lambs per cut)

2* 3* 4* 5*Short lion - 7 34 35 24 % Topside - 29 48 17 5 %

Can we predict this grade ?

Page 31: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

IMF vs MSA consumer score

6

9

9

11

IMF nails juicy and flavour

Page 32: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Shear force vs MSA consumer score

11

7

6

6

Shear force nails tenderness

Page 33: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Other correlates • Carcase fatness• Carcase muscling• Lean meat yield• Carcase wt• Colour• …………

Page 34: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

MSA Mark II

• Currently too hard to measure shear force or intramuscular fat in the abattoir

• Currently cannot grade a lamb carcase commercially• So EQ claims will be underpinned by:

– in part the sires used– ideally carcase measures

Page 35: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Consumer score breeding value• Use std genetic techniques to develop a consumer score

breeding value for sires:– Consumer score– Shear force tenderness– Intramuscular fat– Lean Meat Yield– Other correlates …………

• Support with genomic prediction• Use the breeding value to underpin quality claims

Page 36: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

MSA Mark II – 2nd phaseGrade individual carcases for LMY and meat quality

• Develop better LMY prediction ‘on line’• Develop meat quality and IMF measurement ‘on line’

– GR fat-o-meter II probe with electrical impedance– Wide wavelength vision system– Rhaman spectroscopy

These are AMPC/MLA projects in progress

Page 37: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Conclusions

• Current MSA system is a simple no brainer• Processors/retailers are seeing the benefits• We still need producers to sign up – do it today !

• However it does not allow for continuous improvement and lean meat yield interactions

Page 38: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Conclusions

• Meat science phenotypes - shear force tenderness and intramuscular fat– Heritable– We know the key production factors that effect them– Predictive of the consumer score– Interact with lean meat yield

• We will be able to develop a consumer score breeding value

Page 39: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Conclusions

• MSA mark II underpinned by consumer score sire breeding value

• Cuts based grading down star ratings• Will allow us to select for Lean Meat Yield and Eating

quality together

Page 40: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Conclusions

• Processors to their credit are investing in R&D for better carcase measurement systems

• Are we heading for carcase grading at last ?– Lean meat yield– Eating quality

Page 41: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Questions…

Aussie lamb - premier meat on the Planet!

Page 42: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Quick reality checkGetting 4* cuts in moderate carcase wt Sth beef• Optimal processing ✔• No hormones ✔• Get’em young (< about 140 oss = 18-24 months) ✔• Have just enough marble = solid score 1 (4-6% IMF) ✔

Page 43: Dave Pethick Lis  Pannier & the Sheep CRC Meat Science Team

Other correlates e.g LMY vs IMF

LMY breeding value

IMF

bree

ding

val

ue