bell notificationshomepageloginNewPostedit profiledmBox

Hoots : Is it useful to retain the myoglobin of meat which has collected as a fluid at the bottom of the container? This is in India. I purchase fresh meat (chicken/beef) from the shop and sometimes keep it in the freezer until I'm - freshhoot.com

10% popularity   0 Reactions

Is it useful to retain the myoglobin of meat which has collected as a fluid at the bottom of the container?
This is in India. I purchase fresh meat (chicken/beef) from the shop and sometimes keep it in the freezer until I'm ready to pressure-cook it on some other day.

I noticed that after thawing it in the fridge for a day, there was a red liquid that collects at the bottom of the container. I assumed the freezing process squeezes the meat and that causes the blood in it to flow out (silly me). This answer says it's myoglobin. Wikipedia says...

The released myoglobin is filtered by the kidneys but is toxic to the
renal tubular epithelium and so may cause acute kidney injury

...but I'm hoping that's myoglobin in the bloodstream, and not a part of digestion.

I searched for research papers to check for safety of consuming myoglobin, and came across this paper that says...

As internal cooking temperature increased soluble myoglobin content
decreased with a corresponding increase in percent myoglobin
denatured. Percent myoglobin denaturation values ranged from 0 (raw
chops) to 77.30% in mutton chops cooked to 79 °C internal temperature.

Couldn't find much else on the safety aspect, but since it gets denatured, I'm assuming it'd be safe.

However, all this literature appears to refer to the myoglobin within the meat that gives it a flavour and juiciness. What about the liquid at the bottom of the container that contains myoglobin? Is it useful to retain it or is it better to just drain it away since it is separated from the meat already?


Load Full (2)

Login to follow hoots

2 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

10% popularity   0 Reactions

My experience, so just opinion, myoblobin will turn to the gelled like, gooey substance under heat. Not a pleasant texture, and not for me a pleasing flavor either. That is one its own so I tend to discard any which pools around the meat. Also, if attempting to sear meat in a pan which is not hot enough, the liquid from excess myoblobin can add to the steaming effect and lead to lower quality pale grey protein.

The other side though, small amounts I have found help in creating a more flavorful crusty sear, provided your heat is high enough. Therefor, I myself tend to not wash or pat dry, or if I do I will then salt and allow the meat to sit and dry out a little more to help with the sear.


10% popularity   0 Reactions

The quote in the Wikipedia article you link to:

The released myoglobin is filtered by the kidneys but is toxic to the
renal tubular epithelium and so may cause acute kidney injury

is myoglobin released due to Rhabdomyolysis, so your own muscles affected by this disease can cause kidney injury, not the meat (also muscle tissue) you're eating.

Having said that, I haven't found any useful purpose for the liquid that gets separated from frozen meat. I've tried:

pouring it op top of the meat when cooking
adding it to gravy
using it as stock
...

and it coagulates, doesn't give any good taste so I consider it not very useful, so nowadays, I throw it down the sink when someone gives me a piece of frozen meat to cook.

Note: Freezing changes the texture and taste of the meat, and it's easy to get fresh meat where I live


Back to top Use Dark theme