Retorting conditions affect palatability and physical characteristics of canned cat food

Esther A Hagen-Plantinga, Denmark F Orlanes, Guido Bosch, Wouter H Hendriks, Antonius F B van der Poel

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    The effects of different temperature and time conditions during retorting of canned cat food on physicochemical characteristics and palatability were examined. For this purpose, lacquer cans containing an unprocessed loaf-type commercial cat food were heated in a pressurised retorting system at three specified temperature-time profiles (113°C/232 min, 120°C/103 min and 127°C/60 min) to equal a similar lethality (F0 value = 30). Physicochemical properties (viscosity, texture, particle size, pH) were determined, and a 10 d three-bowl palatability test was performed with ten European shorthair cats. Retorting at 113°C/232 min resulted in differences in all the physical parameters examined (<viscosity, firmness, adhesiveness, and > particle size). Significant pH differences were observed (6·53, 6·63 and 6·66 for T113/232, 120 and 127°C, respectively). Preference ratios were 0·38, 0·31 and 0·31 for T113/232, 120 and 127°C, respectively (P = 0·067). It can be concluded that different retorting temperature-time profiles with equal F0 value significantly affect physical characteristics and tended to affect palatability of moist cat food.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article numbere23
    JournalJournal of Nutritional Science
    Volume6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2017

    Keywords

    • Thermal processing
    • Palatability
    • Texture
    • Viscosity
    • Canned food
    • Cats

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