Dry Aged PDF
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International Journal of
Gastronomy and
Food Science
International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science 1 (2012) 7880
www.elsevier.com/locate/ijgfs
Abstract
The effort needed to serve the perfect steak requires good cattle to create high quality fresh beef with optimum avour and texture.
Nevertheless, these properties can be enhanced by optimising a dry aging beef process beyond the traditional aging period. The results
are discussed in terms of the specic parameters involved during the storage, together with the effect on the sensory properties, on taste
and mouth feel, to obtain top quality meat.
& 2011 AZTI-Tecnalia. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Introduction to the culinary concept and the control systems in its cells stop functioning, the
enzymes begin attacking other cell molecules indiscrimi-
The time honoured way to age beef is to dry age it nately, turning large avourless molecules into smaller,
avourful fragments. They break proteins into savoury
A very often mistake is using packaging for aging beef. amino acids and fats and fat like membrane molecules into
In fact, sealing beef is indeed not aging it, but preserving it. aromatic fatty acids. All of these breakdown products
From our point of view, there is no discernible improve- contribute to the intensely meaty, nutty avour of aged
ment in avour of this beef. As a matter of fact the meat. During cooking, the same products also react with
opposite occurs and the quality is diminished. The beef will each other to form new molecules that enrich the aroma
always have a drying texture on the palate, a sort of further.
liverish cardboard avour. The second factor affecting meat over time is that the
muscle enzymes also diminish toughness. The major
candidate to explain tenderisation post-rigour is the
So what makes dry aging so good and what happens to the
enzyme called calpain (Hopkins and Thompson, 2002).
meat over time?
This enzyme mainly weakens the supporting proteins that
hold the contracting laments in place. Equally it appears
It is well known there are two main factors which affect
that other enzymes have a role in tenderisation.
meat throughout time, avour and texture. The rst factor
In conclusion, it is well known that enzyme activity in
is reasonably well documented in Harold McGees (2004)
meat goes on for about 14 or so days. However, what is
book Food & Cooking (2004). In this book, he states that
happening after that? That is the peculiarity and where
the action of enzymes on the protein changes character-
does the improvement in avour come from? This is a little
istics, avour and texture. Once the animal is slaughtered
less impressively documented. Traditionally, dry aging
n
Tel.: 61 2 8078 1801; fax 61 2 9221 4411.
would take place for about 2835 days. At this point the
E-mail address: [email protected] view is that the meat has reached its potential, the balance
1878-450X/$ - see front matter & 2011 AZTI-Tecnalia. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.ijgfs.2011.11.005
between tenderness, taste and juiciness is at an optimum. and full blood Wagyu. Although we noticed a slight
However, there is no information about the quality of the decrease in juiciness, it certainly was worth the trade-off.
meat after this traditional period of aging time. It is at this At that stage, beef ribs were stored to age from 80 days
point that we did indeed start our beef ageing programme to 120 days. What we found was that a 120 days dry aging
at Rockpool Bar & Grill Melbourne some 6 years ago. process, to our taste, had not increased the avour of
The aim of this work therefore was to follow the quality beef at the same levels we had observed between 35 and
of aged meat far beyond the traditional time to see the 80 days; on the other hand, juiciness had diminished to a
evolution in sensory properties such as avour and texture. point where it affected the eating quality of the steak. For
all these reasons, we decided that in order to manage our
Culinary concept: Denition stock and to get the maximum out of our beef, the aging
process needed to be established between 50 and 80 days.
Flavour and texture of dry age beef can be intensely This is the point to which we produce our beef ribs in all
enhanced by increasing aging time and optimising storage our Rockpool Bar & Grills today.
beyond the traditional aging period to obtain top What happens and why does the beef taste more
quality meat. complex? It clearly seems that the beef is dehydrating
slowly and that is concentrating the avour within the
Description of the culinary process cells. This is where the trade-off of avour and juiciness is
decided. We believe that between 50 and 80 days, the more
Tasting beef with longer ages on it was denitely an dense meat due to dehydration actually created an inter-
improvement in avour and texture. Ribs of beef were esting and quite delicious mouth feel that adds to the allure
rstly stored for 45 and 50 days and monitored to follow of the concentration of avour (Fig. 1). So in effect the
any change in the beef. What we found was that, to our
taste, there was a deeper and more complex avour,
especially in our 36-month-old Black Angus grass fed beef
Fig. 2. UV lighting.
Fig. 1. Beef at one week aged and beef at 60 days. Fig. 3. Fans driving air around the room.
80 N. Perry / International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science 1 (2012) 7880