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Retail display case lighting applications |
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Fresh Meat Blooming in Grocery Store Merchandisers
Myoglobin is a protein pigment that stores and carries oxygen for muscle
tissue metabolism. It contains an iron atom that can bind with oxygen,
water, or nitric oxide (responsible for the color
of cured meats) and can oxidize (lose an electron), chemical reactions that
cause
the
color
of
fresh meat to change.
In several studies it has been found that color is very important to
consumers when they select meat; for beef the ideal color is bright cherry
red; for lamb, dark cherry red; for pork, grayish pink; and for veal,
pale pink. These colors are achieved by allowing the fresh meat to bloom.
In a freshly slaughtered animal, myoglobin is purple, which gives the
meat a dark purplish hue. The meat is often preserved at this color
by packaging it in airtight, dark containers while the meat is stored
or
transported. Within half an hour of exposure to oxygen and light, the
meat blooms: myoglobin becomes oxygenated as oxygen is absorbed by
the meat and binds to the iron atom, forming oxymyoglobin, a characteristically
red pigment that causes the meat to turn from purple to the appropriate
shade of red or pink.
The exact shade of red is determined by the amount
of myoglobin in the muscle tissue, which can vary depending upon the
animal’s diet, age, sex, and species, and the amount of exercise
it had. Meat from older animals and meat from muscles that were strengthened
through exercise tend to be darker. Thus beef, which has a higher concentration
of myoglobin than pork, lamb, or chicken, is bright cherry red, while
veal from a milk-fed penned calf and pork are pale pink.
While this
oxygenation is reversible, and the meat pigments fluctuate between
these two purple
and red colors regularly, other reactions soon become more predominant.
The blooming period is therefore short-lived, but can be prolonged
by minimizing the exposure to ultraviolet and visible spectrum radiation,
maintaining low temperatures, and using modified
atmosphere packaging (MAP) containing very high concentrations of oxygen.
For
meat science references and excerpts click here.
COLOR OF FRESH MEAT IN RETAIL DISPLAYS
As consumers select meat,
they are strongly influenced by their first impression, which comes
from the meat’s color. The
color of fresh meat is determined by the pigment myoglobin, which
undergoes various chemical reactions to form other pigments.
These reactions are triggered by light, heat, and oxygen availability. <more...>
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FRESH MEAT
BLOOMING IN GROCERY STORE MERCHANDISERS
Within half an hour of exposure to oxygen and light, fresh meat blooms:
myoglobin becomes oxygenated forming oxymyoglobin, a characteristically
red pigment that causes the meat to turn from purple to the appropriate
shade of red or pink. <more...>
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FRESH
MEAT DISCOLORATION IN RETAIL MEAT SHOWCASES
With
continued exposure to light, the fresh meat’s appealing
red or pink bloom is replaced by an unappetizing and permanent
brown or grey color. This change is initiated when the light
source emits high levels of ultraviolet and yellow wavelengths,
which accelerates the rate of meat decomposition. <more...>
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Promolux True Color Definition Lamps
Promolux Safe Spectrum balanced full spectrum lamps emit lower levels
of heat and ultraviolet radiation than regular supermarket fluorescent
lamps, thus reducing the rate of meat decomposition. Compared to other
fluorescent lighting, Promolux lamps emit 86% lower UV B radiation, a
shorter wavelength that penetrates and causes heating, and 52% lower
UV A radiation, a longer wavelength that tends to affect surfaces.
Because
Promolux lamps are designed for true color definition, they have a more
balanced visible spectrum than other fluorescent lamps. The yellow and
green wavelengths that are predominant in regular fluorescent lighting
are the most damaging wavelengths in the visible spectrum.
Promolux lamps emit a more balanced range of wavelengths, including
more of the red and blue wavelengths and more moderate levels of the
yellow and green wavelengths. This balance ensures that the cherry red
of blooming beef its white fat and marbling are displayed in their true
colors, rather than appearing brownish with yellowed or pink fat as often
happens with regular meat display lighting.
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