Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles Meat is muscle and so muscle is made up of three main protein types, one of them being muscle fibres, and so they're the strings that make up your muscle, it's the primary thing that you're eating and they contract to enable movement. The second type of protein is elastin, and elastin is either a tendon or a ligament and it's often referred to in the cooking world as either gristle or silver skin. Now both of those types of protein, it doesn't matter how much you cook them, you're not going to make them more or less tender, if anything, by applying heat, all you're going to do is dehydrate the muscle fibres themselves. The third type of protein is collagen. Now collagen is a type of glue that binds together these muscle fibres so the more the muscles fibres are working, the more collagen will be present, so the less the muscle works, the less collagen is present. Collagen is the only one of the three proteins that you can melt away by applying heat units. So when we look at the anatomy of an animal, depending on what the function of those muscles are, that will dictate our cooking method. So with the muscles that are part of the locomotive group, those muscles tend to be doing a lot more work therefore they tend to be higher in collagen and require a lower temperature of heat for a prolonged period of time in order to melt away all that collagen. Whereas muscles that are part of the supportive regions of the animal, those muscles do not require as much exposure to heat so they can be cooked faster, with a higher temperature. The ultimate goal when selecting the meat to become tender is that you're able to melt away the collagen, while not overcooking your muscle fibres.
B1 US collagen muscle protein melt heat meat How to Cook Different Cuts of Meat 173 6 陳聖方 posted on 2019/05/17 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary