McCoy, J.Nason, P.Chung, D.Kastner, Curtis L.Lawrence, A.Dikeman, Michael E.Hunt, Melvin C.Kropf, Donald H.2011-02-092011-02-092011-02-09http://hdl.handle.net/2097/7153Nearly all steer and heifer beef carcasses processed in the United, States are chilled before cutting. However, recent meat science research has shown that carcasses can be processed, and quality of meat maintained, with little or no chilling. Processing as defined here involves cutting the carcasses into subprimal pieces, removing bones and excess fat, sealing the pieces in vacuum packages, and placing the packages in palletized boxes. It is already known that substantial economic saving can be obtained from reduced storage and transportation costs of boxed beef, but little work has been done on the economic feasibility of hot processing.BeefHot processing beef carcassesStudy I: economic feasibility of hot processing beef carcassesConference paper