A Comparison of Fresh Pork Colour Measurements by Using Four Commercial Handheld Devices

The objective of this study was to evaluate the performance of different low-cost instruments to measure pork colour in comparison to Minolta spectrophotometers and industry subjective standards. Canadian pork colour standards and commercial meat (252 loin chops and 46 tenderloins) were measured usi...

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Autores principales: Xinyi Wei, Stephanie Lam, Benjamin M. Bohrer, Bethany Uttaro, Oscar López-Campos, Nuria Prieto, Ivy L. Larsen, Manuel Juárez
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: MDPI AG 2021
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Nix
RSD
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/a73f7f87556f4f5d867b4b638871eed0
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Sumario:The objective of this study was to evaluate the performance of different low-cost instruments to measure pork colour in comparison to Minolta spectrophotometers and industry subjective standards. Canadian pork colour standards and commercial meat (252 loin chops and 46 tenderloins) were measured using two Minolta (CM 700D) spectrophotometers, four Nix sensors (two Nix Pro II and two Nix QC), and four Spectro devices (two Spectro 1 and two Spectro 1 Pro). Using Bland-Altman plots, all hand-held devices revealed similar performance on colour coordinates, except for the Nix Pro II, which had more variability on <i>a</i>* value, and Spectro 1 Pro on <i>b</i>* value, when compared to Minolta measurements. Low RSD values (< 5%) were obtained from repeated measurements on Canadian colour standards. The trend of colour coordinates on colour scores (0–6) were similar for all four commercial instruments, except for <i>a*</i> from Nix Pro and <i>b*</i> from Spectro 1. The correlation coefficients between subjective standards and colour coordinates from the Nix and Spectro devices were slightly higher than the Minolta spectrophotometers. Even though Nix and Spectro 1 series instruments generated different absolute colour coordinate values on meat samples, these pocket-size instruments presented great reliability to measure pork surface colour. However, operational limitations of the instruments, such as the internal calibration time between samples for the Spectro 1 series, should also be considered.