76546 - Seafood Quality

Academic Year 2019/2020

  • Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
  • Campus: Cesena
  • Corso: Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Food Science and Technology (cod. 8531)

Learning outcomes

At the end of this course, students will be aware of how seafood quality is affected by production and harvesting systems as well as of empirical and analitycal methods to assess product quality.

Course contents

Classification of seafood. Statistics on global production of fish products according to the production system (fisheries and aquaculture). Main species of pelagic, demersal, diadromous and freshwater fish, crustaceans and mollusks. World, European and domestic data on production and consumption of seafood.

Chemical composition of seafood. Structure of finfish muscles. Characteristics of proteins and lipids and variability on its content and composition. Composition of edible portion of crustaceans and mollusks.

Freshness of seafood. Main degradative processes during storage. Evaluation of freshness/quality by sensory empirical indicators and standardized criteria and analytical chemical/biochemical, physical and microbiological parameters.

Main fishing and aquaculture production systems. Major fishing systems as related to seafood species. Aquaculture systems for mussels, clams, oysters, trout, sea bass and sea bream. Critical issues and innovations in breeding of other fish species.

Peri-mortem phases and quality of fish products. Harvesting, killing/stunning, bleeding and evisceration. Implications of refrigeration and freezing methods on seafood quality.

Seafood processing. Main principles and techniques. Drying, salting, smoking, marination, canning and surimi technology. Packaging and labelling of seafood products.

Readings/Bibliography

Lecture slides andnotes

Gokoglu N., Yerlikaya P. (2015). Seafood chilling, refrigeration and freezing: science and technology. Wiley-Blackwell

Grazyna Daczkowska-Kozon E., Sun Pan B. (2010). Environmental effects on seafood availability, safety, and quality. CRC Press.

Rehbein H., Oehlenschlager J. (2009). Fishery products: Quality, safety and authenticity. Wiley-Blackwell.

Venugopal V. (2005). Seafood processing: Adding value through quick freezing, retortable packaging and cook-chilling. CRC Press.

Teaching methods

Frontal lectures

Laboratory practises

Seminaries held by food sector experts

Assessment methods

The oral examination will consist of an interview lasting about 30 minutes. During this interview, theoretical and applicative knowledge of the student will be verified. In particular, it will be evaluated clarity in the presentation of the contents, in-depth knowledge and connection between the main topics, appropriate use of the specific terminology and language of the sector. Due to the current COVID-19 outbreak, the examinations will be held exclusively by means of Microsoft Teams.

Teaching tools

Power point slides of the lectures will be available through the IOL website.

Lab practises will be performed in "Animal production" laboratory of the Master in Food Science and Technology.

Office hours

See the website of Massimiliano Petracci

SDGs

Zero hunger Industry, innovation and infrastructure Responsible consumption and production Oceans

This teaching activity contributes to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda.