Meat quality and sensory attributes of meat produced from broiler chickens fed a high oleic peanut diet

Poult Sci. 2019 Oct 1;98(10):5188-5197. doi: 10.3382/ps/pez258.

Abstract

Previous studies have identified peanut meal prepared from normal-oleic peanuts as a suitable and economical ingredient for broiler feed. However, to date, no studies have examined the use of new, high-oleic peanut (HO-PN) cultivars as a feed ingredient for poultry. This project aimed to determine the effect of HO-PNs as a feed ingredient for broiler chickens on the quality and sensory attributes of the meat produced. To test 3 experimental diets, male broiler chicks were randomly placed, at hatch, in raised-wire cages, in 10 replicate pens per treatment with 10 chicks per cage. For 6 wk, chicks were fed, ad libitum, one of the three isocaloric, isonitrogenous diets: (1) a conventional soybean meal plus corn control diet, (2) 10 to 12% HO-PN + corn diet, or (3) a control corn diet spiked with ≈6.0% oleic fatty acid oil (OA). At 42 D, 3 broilers per pen (30 per treatment) were processed to determine meat quality and for consumer evaluation. Carcass weights and breast yields were reduced in broilers fed HO-PN, while leg carcass yields were greater in broilers fed HO-PN in comparison to the other groups. Chicken breast from broilers fed HO-PN had reduced meat-pH, reduced L* color values, and increased cooked loss compared to other treatments. Nevertheless, a group of 100-consumer panelists scored all 3-treatment groups similar in terms of sensory attributes for cooked chicken. While additional studies must be performed, this study suggest that HO-PN may be a suitable broiler feed ingredient.

Keywords: broiler chickens; chicken breast sensory attributes; feed ingredients; high-oleic peanuts; meat quality.

MeSH terms

  • Animal Feed / analysis*
  • Animals
  • Arachis / chemistry*
  • Chickens
  • Diet / veterinary
  • Male
  • Meat / analysis*
  • Nuts / chemistry*
  • Oleic Acid / analysis*
  • Random Allocation

Substances

  • Oleic Acid