Preservation of Sardinella longiceps in iced and chilled seawater. Part 1 - Changes during storage with particular reference to bacterial load and nitrogenous compounds

Oil sardines in prime condition were subjected to onboard chilling. Two lots were chilled in CSW (samples C and CI), a third lot was chilled in crushed ice (sample I) and a fourth lot left not iced on deck (Sample AI). Upon landing sample AI was iced and sample CI was removed from the CSW and iced. All the four samples were kept in a chilled room for storage studies. The fish chilled and stored in CSW recorded the least, and the fish subjected to delayed icing, the highest values for all the indices of spoilage namely, free amino nitrogen, trimethylamine (TMA) and total volatile base nitrogen (TVBN). The total psychrophilic bacterial number also showed a similar trend. The organoleptic assessment of the cooked samples revealed C I, CI, AI to be the order of preference throughout the storage. This assessment was found to hold good for the rest of the parameters as well. The CSW held fishes were found to be distinctly superior to the iced ones for the first five days of storage. Such a marked prevalence in quality for five days would suffice for the fish to fetch a premium in the market over other landings of the same fish whether chilled or not chilled. Chilling on board in CSW and icing the same after landings, did not show encouraging results.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Krishnakumar, S., Hiremath, G.G., Menon, N.R., Shetty, H.P.C.
Format: article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1985
Subjects:Fisheries, chilling storage, storage effects, quality control, fish storage, Sardinella longiceps, bacterial load,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/33880
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-aquadocs-1834-33880
record_format koha
spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-338802021-07-09T03:09:30Z Preservation of Sardinella longiceps in iced and chilled seawater. Part 1 - Changes during storage with particular reference to bacterial load and nitrogenous compounds Krishnakumar, S. Hiremath, G.G. Menon, N.R. Shetty, H.P.C. Fisheries chilling storage storage effects quality control fish storage Sardinella longiceps bacterial load Oil sardines in prime condition were subjected to onboard chilling. Two lots were chilled in CSW (samples C and CI), a third lot was chilled in crushed ice (sample I) and a fourth lot left not iced on deck (Sample AI). Upon landing sample AI was iced and sample CI was removed from the CSW and iced. All the four samples were kept in a chilled room for storage studies. The fish chilled and stored in CSW recorded the least, and the fish subjected to delayed icing, the highest values for all the indices of spoilage namely, free amino nitrogen, trimethylamine (TMA) and total volatile base nitrogen (TVBN). The total psychrophilic bacterial number also showed a similar trend. The organoleptic assessment of the cooked samples revealed C I, CI, AI to be the order of preference throughout the storage. This assessment was found to hold good for the rest of the parameters as well. The CSW held fishes were found to be distinctly superior to the iced ones for the first five days of storage. Such a marked prevalence in quality for five days would suffice for the fish to fetch a premium in the market over other landings of the same fish whether chilled or not chilled. Chilling on board in CSW and icing the same after landings, did not show encouraging results. Pt. 2: Changes during storage with particular reference to salt penetration and lipid deterioration during CSW holding. Fishery Technology, 23(1), pp. 1-6 2021-06-24T17:32:20Z 2021-06-24T17:32:20Z 1985 article 0015-3001 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/33880 en application/pdf application/pdf 126-131 http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/18497 12051 2015-11-14 12:04:58 18497 Society of Fisheries Technologists, India
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Fisheries
chilling storage
storage effects
quality control
fish storage
Sardinella longiceps
bacterial load
Fisheries
chilling storage
storage effects
quality control
fish storage
Sardinella longiceps
bacterial load
spellingShingle Fisheries
chilling storage
storage effects
quality control
fish storage
Sardinella longiceps
bacterial load
Fisheries
chilling storage
storage effects
quality control
fish storage
Sardinella longiceps
bacterial load
Krishnakumar, S.
Hiremath, G.G.
Menon, N.R.
Shetty, H.P.C.
Preservation of Sardinella longiceps in iced and chilled seawater. Part 1 - Changes during storage with particular reference to bacterial load and nitrogenous compounds
description Oil sardines in prime condition were subjected to onboard chilling. Two lots were chilled in CSW (samples C and CI), a third lot was chilled in crushed ice (sample I) and a fourth lot left not iced on deck (Sample AI). Upon landing sample AI was iced and sample CI was removed from the CSW and iced. All the four samples were kept in a chilled room for storage studies. The fish chilled and stored in CSW recorded the least, and the fish subjected to delayed icing, the highest values for all the indices of spoilage namely, free amino nitrogen, trimethylamine (TMA) and total volatile base nitrogen (TVBN). The total psychrophilic bacterial number also showed a similar trend. The organoleptic assessment of the cooked samples revealed C I, CI, AI to be the order of preference throughout the storage. This assessment was found to hold good for the rest of the parameters as well. The CSW held fishes were found to be distinctly superior to the iced ones for the first five days of storage. Such a marked prevalence in quality for five days would suffice for the fish to fetch a premium in the market over other landings of the same fish whether chilled or not chilled. Chilling on board in CSW and icing the same after landings, did not show encouraging results.
format article
topic_facet Fisheries
chilling storage
storage effects
quality control
fish storage
Sardinella longiceps
bacterial load
author Krishnakumar, S.
Hiremath, G.G.
Menon, N.R.
Shetty, H.P.C.
author_facet Krishnakumar, S.
Hiremath, G.G.
Menon, N.R.
Shetty, H.P.C.
author_sort Krishnakumar, S.
title Preservation of Sardinella longiceps in iced and chilled seawater. Part 1 - Changes during storage with particular reference to bacterial load and nitrogenous compounds
title_short Preservation of Sardinella longiceps in iced and chilled seawater. Part 1 - Changes during storage with particular reference to bacterial load and nitrogenous compounds
title_full Preservation of Sardinella longiceps in iced and chilled seawater. Part 1 - Changes during storage with particular reference to bacterial load and nitrogenous compounds
title_fullStr Preservation of Sardinella longiceps in iced and chilled seawater. Part 1 - Changes during storage with particular reference to bacterial load and nitrogenous compounds
title_full_unstemmed Preservation of Sardinella longiceps in iced and chilled seawater. Part 1 - Changes during storage with particular reference to bacterial load and nitrogenous compounds
title_sort preservation of sardinella longiceps in iced and chilled seawater. part 1 - changes during storage with particular reference to bacterial load and nitrogenous compounds
publishDate 1985
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/33880
work_keys_str_mv AT krishnakumars preservationofsardinellalongicepsinicedandchilledseawaterpart1changesduringstoragewithparticularreferencetobacterialloadandnitrogenouscompounds
AT hiremathgg preservationofsardinellalongicepsinicedandchilledseawaterpart1changesduringstoragewithparticularreferencetobacterialloadandnitrogenouscompounds
AT menonnr preservationofsardinellalongicepsinicedandchilledseawaterpart1changesduringstoragewithparticularreferencetobacterialloadandnitrogenouscompounds
AT shettyhpc preservationofsardinellalongicepsinicedandchilledseawaterpart1changesduringstoragewithparticularreferencetobacterialloadandnitrogenouscompounds
_version_ 1756079151093121024