Module 8 PDF
Module 8 PDF
Poultry
Nature of Poultry
Poultry, which consist of domestic birds specially bred for the
table, includes chicken, duck, goose, pigeon, and turkey. The
production of poultry may be adapted to most areas of the world. At
present, it is main source of meat of the diet of many people
throughout the world.
A poultry farm can produce meat in 8 weeks and eggs in 24
weeks. Furthermore, poultry meat is low in calories in relation to other
nutrients present in it. Hence, it is good food for those on weight
control diets,convalescents, and old people who are not physically
active.
CLASSIFICATION OF POULTRY
TURKEY
CHICKEN
DUCK
PIGEON GOOSE
CHICKEN
Throughout the year, chickens are available, fresh or frozen.
When sold oven-ready they are plucked, drawn, and trussed.
DUCKS
Most ducks are marketed as ducklings or young ducks. Duck
does not reserve as many people as a chicken of similar weight does.
A 6 b. duck is only enough for 4 people. A duck is a fatty bird that is
best roasted.
TURKEYS
Turkeys re not readily available in the market although they
may be classified into:
A frier roaster is a young immature turkey (16 weeks of age 4.8 lbs.)
of either sex that has tender meat with soft pliable, smooth-textured
skin and flexible breast bone cartilage.
A young hen is a young female turkey (5-7 months weighing 8.4 lbs.)
that is tender-meated with soft pliable, smooth-textured skin and
breast bone cartilage that is somewhat less flexible than in fryer-
roaster turkey.
PIGEONS
GOOSE
It is a fatty with creamy white flesh which is light brown cooked.
1. Place the bird breast down in the board and make an incision in
the entire length of the spine, through the both skin and flesh.
push the skin and flesh back as you cut.
2. Work the skin off the neck down, so you can get the neck bone to
extend way beyond it.
3. Start the ball and socket joint of the shoulder, cutting it free and
boning the shoulder blade, full the wing bone through the inside,
bringing the skin with it.
4. Strike for the ball and socket joint of the leg and pull the bone
through.
PRINCIPLES OF SELECTION
In the Philippines, poultry is marketed in these forms: live,
whole, dressed, drawn and pieced ready to cook. It is important to
know the characteristics of each form to insure proper selection when
purchasing poultry.
POULTRY CUTS
Whether the bird in questions is a chicken, a turkey, a duck or a
goose, the same terminology applies.
Drumstick
The drumstick is a firm favourite for barbecuing or
frying, either in batter or rolled in bread crumbs.
Drumsticks are very good value too.
Wing
Wings do not supply very much meat, but are ideal
and very popular party or finger food. They can be
fried, roast or barbecued, with or without a marinade
or glaze.
Thigh
The thigh is suitable for casseroling and other slow-
cooking methods. Thigh meat has a lot of flavour,
and is often the cut recommended for curry or
oriental dishes.
Leg
This comprises of the drumstick and thigh. Large
pieces with bones, such as this, are suitable for
slow-cooking, such as casseroling or poaching.
Breast or Fillet
The tender white meat of the breast is the most
popular part of the chicken. It is available either on
the bone, or as a fillet. Chicken breast can be
simply cooked in butter or can be stuffed, coated or
wrapped for extra flavor. It is an extremely versatile
cut.
1.) Poultry meat lacks color. Therefore to add color to the meat and
intensify its flavour, poultry should be browned as part of cooking.
2.) Mature birds have more extractives than young ones. Thus, they
are excellent for various kinds of soup and broth. Fryers and
broilers are suitable for frying.
3.) Low to moderate heat is the best cooking temperature for poultry
because it produces a tender and flavorful product and allows little
shrinkage of meat and more retention of nutritive value.
5.) When cooking poultry, the age and fat distribution f the birds
should be considered. Young birds are more palatable when
cooked by dry heat; older birds are best cooked by moist heat.
and full up the air spaces and prevent the stuffing from being
thoroughly cooked.
7.) In Roasting, chicken cuts are laid with the breast side down to
produce a tender and juicy product. The breast side up position
tends to dry it out.
Fats fish are rich in unsaturated fatty acids which are readily
digestible. Fish fats are also rich in the fat-soluble vitamins A and D.
FINFISH
4. Dressed fish - dressed fish has been scaled and eviscerated. Often
the head, tail and fins are also removed.
5. Fillets - These are the two meaty sides of the fish cut from the
backbone. A fillet cut from one side of the fish is called a single fillet.
A butterfly fillet consists of two single fillets held together by uncut
flesh and skin in the belly portion of the fish.
9. Flaked - Fish meat separated from the whole fish is called flaked
fish.
Fish Cookery
In the Philippines,there re various fish which may be classified
for either dry or moist heat method of cookery. Some fish recipes are
a combination of both.
Dry heat cookery. This includes broiling, baking, frying and toasting.
In dry heat cookery of fish, it is important to avoid overcooking,
otherwise he fish would be dry and loses its acceptability. The skin
must be crisp but the flesh must be moist and juicy.
Moist Heat Cookery. This involves water as added water or its oven.
It is very important that the fish is not overcooked. One sign f
overcooked fish by this method is the falling off the eyes.
Preservation Of Finfishes
A. Drying
Finfishes are commonly preserved during drying. The most
common method is whole fish or butterfly filleted fish. The loss of
moisture through drying makes the fish less susceptible to
spoilage. Dried fish may thus be stored for months at room
temperature.
B. Smoking
Smoking is another preservation method of fish but shelf - life is
only 24 hours at room temperature since the fish is not to be
extensively dried. Smoking preserves the fish somewhat but
mainly it imparts desirable characteristics to the fish. Smoked
fish is locally called tinapa.
C. Freezing
Fish are stored at freezing temperature to prevent spoilage .
The low temperature prevent bacterial spoilage.
D. Canning
Canning is preserving food by heating in hermetically sealed
containers.
SHELLFISH
Crustaceans
They are shellfishes with the hard shells over the back of the
body and along the claws but have softer shells covering the lower
part of the body and legs.
Mollusks
These are two types of mollusks: the univalves with only one
shell and bivalves with two shells. The shells of mollusks are usually
hard all over so that they are not in any case eaten. Examples of a
univalve is kuhol while example of bivalves are clams, oysters and
mussels.
A TYPICAL FINFISH
Meat and
Meat Products
Meat is the properly derived from cattle, from swine, from sheep
or goats sufficiently mature and in good health at the time of
slaughter. Flesh is any edible part of striated muscle of an animal.
MEAT QUALITY
The main determinants of meat quality are:
Color
- red color in meat is due to oxymyoglobin.
- fat can be seen as a negative or positive is marbled.
- yellow fat is a negative
Juiciness
Toughness (tenderness)
Flavor
MEAT MUSCLE
There are basically two muscle fiber types: Red and White.
Red-high myoglobin content
Food Selection and Preparation
100 Page
STRUCTURE OF MUSCLE
1. Each muscle is surrounded by the epimysium, a sheath of
connective tissue, which is continuous with the tendon that
attached to the bone.
2. The muscle is divided into bundles of fibers.
3. Within each bundle, the fibers are kept by endomysial
connective tissue.
4. The surface of the muscle fibers is known as sarcolemma.
5. The fibers are composed of myofibrils closely packed side by
side.
6. Whole muscle fibers have striated appearance.
7. The wide protein dense bands of the muscle fiber form A-band
which contains a lighter H-zone, while the M-line forms dense
band in the middle of the A-band. The light bands are known as
I-bands, each of which is bisected by a Z-disc.
8. The contractile unit is known as a sarcomere and it lies
between two Z-disc, sharing the I-bands with adjacent
sarcomeres.
9. The striated appearance of the myofibril is due to the presence
of two types of filaments – thick and thin, which are on an
overlapping pattern.
10. Thick filaments are composed of the protein myosin.
11. The major component of the thin filaments is F-actin.
12. When muscle contracts, calcium ions are released from the
sarcoplasmic reticulum due to a nerve impulse.
13. The ions bind to the thin filament allowing the myosin in the
thick filaments to bind.
14. The muscle is shortened by successive cyclic interactions of
the myosin heads, which leads to increase overlap of the thick
and thin filaments.
CONNECTIVE TISSUE
Holds and supports muscle.
Structural ability is given through the connective tissue by the
properties of two major components: Collagen and Elastin.
Collagen is a major determinant of eating quality of cooked
meat.
Elastin is mainly associated with the capillary system.
LIPID
Is about 5-10% of lean meat
Fat is first down abdominally or under the skin and only later in
muscle
The lipid of the meat is primarily triacylglecerols, but vary
according to animal, diet, age and sex.
WATER
About 75% by weight of meat is water.
The majority of water is bound between the thick and thin
myofibrils.
Damage to muscle cells by slow freezing (ice crystallization)
can markedly increase drip
MEAT COLOR
A combination of the meat pigments and light scattering.
Basic protein is myoglobin.
Levels of myoglobin vary according to breed and increase with
age.
MEAT FLAVOR
Raw meat tastes like blood.
Diet, age, sex and species have an effect on flavor.
2. RIGOR MORTIS
The development of stiff and rigid condition in the muscle
is known as rigor mortis. This stage of stiffness occurs as the
pH fall and actomyosin is formed from the previously distinct
actin and myosin proteins of the muscle fiber.
Rate of spoilage
1. The condition of slaughter
2. The health and condition of the animal prior to slaughter
MEAT SPECIALTIES
Liver – the largest gland of the animal body and performs varied
functions including the storage of nutrients in the live animals.
Tripe – is the edible lining of the first and second stomach of the
cattle and carabao.
Tokwa at baboy and kilawin – are popular snack items. They are
made sliced cooked pig’s ear, tokwa (bean curd), uncooked onions
and pepper.
MEAT TENDERNESS
Tenderness is much desired attribute of meat, the impressions of
which involves three aspects:
1. The initial of the meat by the teeth
2. The ease with which the meat breaks into fragments
3. The amount of the residue left after chewing
Aging
Aging is a practice or storing meat carcasses usually beef at hill
temperature just above 0 degree C for 10-14 days at 70% relative
humidity prior to cutting.
Juiciness
It is associated with the water-holding capacity of meat.
MEAT COOKERY
Meat is cooked for various reasons:
1. To improve its palatability quality
2. To increase tenderness
3. For sanitary purposes
SMOKING MEATS
Effects of Smoking
1. Drying effect
2. Imprating desirable organoleptic properties
3. Bringing out color inside the cured meat
4. Imparting antioxidants to the fat
5. Impregnating the outside portions of the meat with
constitutents of smoke that serve as antiseptics and
germicides
6. An adjuvant action of constitutents of smoke and heat
on microorganisms
7. A tendering action from the high humidity of the smoke-
house in combination with its high temperature
8. The imparting of a desirable finish or gloss on both the
skin and the flesh sides of the meat
BACON
The product produced from the picking of the loin of the pig
Is sometimes sold cooked and sometimes semi-cooked
Sold as loins, portioned into various size for later
preparation,sliced an diced.
DRIED MEATS
Meats that are rapidly dried by heat to a very low water activity
Are packed in a variety of forms. For long distance are often
modified atmosphere or vacuum packed
Are intended to be ready to eat
Are commonly sold in bite size pieces
MEAT PROCESSING
Fresh meat should be kept under refrigeration or cool storage
and covered to protect it from insects and animals. Additionally,the
hands and clothes of workers who handle meat should be regularly
cleaned.
In smoking, the effects of heat from the smoke and chemicals in the
smoke, combine to preserve the meat. Smoke also adds distinctive
and attractive flavors and colors to the meat.
BEEF CUTS
PORK CUTS
LAMB CUTS