Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2003-03, Page 28• • 1 1 1 1 4 Re'earchers are working to help pork producers gain more of the consumer's meat counter purchases. • 1 1 • •,,:.. I, • I1 , / 1 f ; f Designed to please From food safety, to taste quality to new processing techniques to animal welfare concerns, researchers at the Centralia Swine Research Update tell of the pork industry's latest efforts to please the consumer. By Keith Roulston Delivering what the consumer wants, whether food safety, uniformity of product or animal -friendly production systems was a major theme at the 22nd annual Centralia Swine Research Update. The emphasis on quality and food safety began with the very first speaker when Dr. Peter Purslow, chair of the department of food sciences at the University of Guelph reviewed the work of some of the research scientists working at the university. Dr. Purslow himself, with a background working in Denmark and Britain, concentrates on quality and quality control. In Denmark, he says, consumers take food safety for granted so most research goes into improving pork's quality and taste. 24 THE RURAL VOICE Some of that research examines the tenderness of pigs slaughtered in a traditional manner versus a low - stress system that takes pigs to their final end in family groupings. The low -stress system reduced drip Loss by a half per cent which may not seem like much, Purslow said, but multiplied by 20 million pigs, it represents a lot of money. On the subject of tenderness, researchers are looking at the influence of strategic feeding to improve tenderness as well as the effect different fiber types in pork muscles have on tenderness. At the processing level, researchers are working to develop an early postmortem biosensor to predict tenderness and exploring packaging strategies to reduce variability in tenderne\ and enhance holding capacity in the meat. Recent research at Guelph has also looked at the nutraceutical benefits of pork. Researchers know that eating pork enhances iron uptake in the human diet and are working to identify the components of the meat that make this possible. On food safety, researchers in a program headed by Dr. Keith Warriner are looking into ways of reducing contamination from farm to fork. At the farm level, for instance, researchers are trying to establish the routes by which pathogens such as Salmonella are introduced into pig herds and to evaluate on-farm strategies to minimize the initial contamination of pig herds prior to processing. At the processor level, researchers are working to develop effective Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP) programs to minimize or prevent cross contamination and evaluate intervention strategies such as acid/hot water washes and steam pasteurization. Researchers under Dr. M. W. Griffiths are working to find new, faster ways to detect bacteria contamination of meat during processing. water-