Abstract
Dry-aging is a practice that involves storing meat at refrigerated temperatures without protective packaging. Despite the increase in dry-aged beef popularity, relatively little is known about commercial dry-aging parameters. Thus, the objectives of this study were to determine dry-aging parameters of commercial aging facilities and their influence on eating quality (acceptability, flavor, tenderness, and juiciness) of dry-aged beef from locations across the United States. Sixty-six Certified Angus Beef® brand bone-in beef strip loins (IMPS #175) were randomly assigned to ten commercial dry-aging facilities across the United States. An additional six strip loins were wet-aged for 45-days as a negative control. Strip loins were shipped overnight to aging locations where a 45-day dry aging period transpired before being returned for subsequent analysis, upon completion of aging. Objective color, pH, and water activity were measured post aging, at the time of processing. Strip loins were then fabricated, and steaks were vacuum packaged and frozen until further analysis. Intrinsic quality parameters objective color (L*, a*, b*), pH, and water activity were not different (P > 0.05) between strip loins aged 45 days by location. Cooler conditions including temperature, percent relative humidity, and air speed were different (P < 0.01) across aging locations. Pacific Northwest consumer panelists indicated a difference in overall acceptability (P < 0.01), tenderness (P = 0.01), and flavor (P < 0.01) based on aging location. Additionally, consumers detected (P < 0.01) unique dry-aging flavors for individual aging locations including cheesy and nutty attributes. Research indicates individual dry-aging facility conditions aid in producing unique dry-aged beef products according to U.S. consumers from the Pacific Northwest Region.