The preservation of some East African freshwater fish


Autoria(s): Hoffman, A.; Disney, J.G.; Pinegar, A.; Cameron, J.D.
Data(s)

1974

Resumo

Quality changes during storage were investigated for several commercially important East African freshwater fish. Lates, Bagrus, Protopterus, Tilapia esculenta and T. nilotica were examined during storage in ice and at ambient temperature (250•C). After 24 hours at ambient temperature Lates and Bagrus were completely spoilt but Protopterus was still edible. In iced storage most fish were acceptable for at least 20 days. Organoleptic examination showed that T. nilotica was acceptable after 22 days storage in ice and that gutting was only marginally beneficial. Changes in physical appearance, which could form the basis of a fish inspection system, were recorded during storage. Possible chemical quality control indices were also investigated. It was found that total volatile bases and hypoxanthine are unlikely to be useful quality indices for the species studied with the possible exception of Lates. The bacterial counts of the flesh and skin of T. esculenta and T. niloticus were found to be low (a maximum of 10 organisms per sq cm of skin or per g of flesh) after 22 days storage in ice.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/20506/1/Pages%20from%20African%20JOURNAL%201974%20paper%201.pdf

Hoffman, A. and Disney, J.G. and Pinegar, A. and Cameron, J.D. (1974) The preservation of some East African freshwater fish. African Journal of Tropical Hydrobiology and Fisheries, 3(1), pp. 1-13.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/20506/

Palavras-Chave #Fisheries
Tipo

Article

NonPeerReviewed