The Effect of Borage Seed Oil (Borago officinalis L.) and Matcha Tea Powder (Camellia sinensis L.) on the Physicochemical Properties, Oxidative Stability, Color, and Tenderness of Vacuum-Packed Lamb Meatloaf During Storage
Agnieszka Latoch, Justyna Libera, Nilgün Öncül, Murat Metli

TL;DR
This study shows that combining borage seed oil and matcha tea improves the quality of lamb meatloaf during storage by reducing fat oxidation and preserving tenderness and color.
Contribution
The novel finding is the effective combination of borage seed oil and matcha tea to limit fat oxidation and maintain meat quality in vacuum-packed lamb meatloaf.
Findings
TBARS values in samples with matcha tea or both additives decreased by up to 80% after 14 days.
Matcha tea reduced redness by about 50% without significantly altering total color.
Borage seed oil reduced shear force by 15%, improving meat tenderness during storage.
Abstract
In this study, the effects of borage seed oil (BO) and matcha tea (MT) on the physicochemical properties, oxidative stability, color, and tenderness of vacuum-packed lamb meatloaf during 14 days of refrigerated storage were evaluated. No significant effect of the plant additives was observed on cooking yield (66%) or pH (≈5.95). Samples with added oil had a higher fat content, which contributed to hydrolytic and oxidative changes that were already evident immediately after production. The addition of MT, as well as the combined use of both BO and MT, effectively limited these changes. After 14 days, TBARS values in these samples decreased by up to 80% compared to the control. Neither BO nor MT affected lightness (L*) or yellowness (b*), whereas matcha, being naturally green, reduced redness (a*) by about 50%. However, no significant differences in total color (ΔE* < 4) were observed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMeat and Animal Product Quality · Food and Agricultural Sciences · Protein Hydrolysis and Bioactive Peptides
