Heat penetration patterns of outside round,
loin strip and eye round muscles cooked by
electric broiler, electric belt grill, or
forced-air convection oven
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Heat penetration patterns of outside round,
loin strip and eye round muscles cooked by
electric broiler, electric belt grill, or
forced-air convection oven
Conference:Cattlemen's Day, 2001, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, March 2, 2001 Starting Page:52, Ending Page:54 Publisher:Kansas State University. Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service
We used an electric belt grill, a forced air
convection oven, and an electric broiler to
cook steaks from three beef muscles; outside
round (biceps femoris), loin strip (longissimus
lumborum) and eye round (semitendinosus).
Belt grill cookery gave the fastest heat penetration
into steaks regardless of temperature
interval. Eye round had the slowest heat transfer
rate for each cooking method perhaps
partially explained by its fiber orientation.
Heat penetration rate into outside round and
loin strip was not different (P>0.05) for cooking
method within a given temperature range.
Heat penetration into muscles between 140 and
158°F was slowest because energy-expensive
reactions (collagen and protein denaturation)
occur in that temperature and temperature
differential between the heat source and meat
is less. Heat penetration also was slow between
122 and 140°F due to the denaturation of
contractile proteins.
Keywords: Beef; Heat penetration; Belt grill; Forced-air convection oven; Electric broiler