|
Contents
Hydrodyne Exploding Meat
Tenderness

At a facility in Buena Vista, Virginia, ARS food technologist Brad Berry
(right) and Eric Staton, president of Tenderwave, Inc., discuss meat
tenderizing operations using the Hydrodyne process.
(K8060-6)
|
In 1992, Morse Solomon, a meat scientist, joined forces with engineer John
Long to test Long's invention, an innovative process called Hydrodyne, which
uses shock waves in water to tenderize meat.
Solomon is with USDA's Agricultural
Research Service, and Long is retired from the Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory in San Francisco, California. Early tests looked promising, but Long
and Solomon needed to take the tests to the next level.
They needed someone willing to take risks. And this person had to believe in
Hydrodyne's potential.
In Virginia, they found Eric Staton, who was with a company called Air
Power, Inc. He was licensed and trained to use explosives, the agent that would
create the shock waves in the process.
Staton helped Solomon and Long safely test the Hydrodyne concept using very
small quantities of explosives and individual cuts of meat, such as steaks and
small roasts.
Originally, in 1992, the process used an ordinary plastic drum filled with
water and fitted with a steel plate at the bottom to reflect shock waves from
an explosion. Yet, this crude device showed tremendous potential to safely
tenderize meat.
Through the U.S. Department of Energy, Long and Solomon received an
energy-related invention grant from the National Institute of Standards &
Technology. A California company, Allied Engineering, built the first
commercial prototype in Alameda. After completion, it was agreed that the
Hydrodyne unit would be moved to Buena Vista, Virginia, Staton's home town.
Today's Hydrodyne uses a 280-gallon tank designed to tenderize 30 packaged
subprimal beef cuts weighing more than 20 pounds each. There are about 10
subprimal cuts per steer.
The 36-year-old Staton, no longer with Air Power, Inc., is now a Hydrodyne
entrepreneur--president of Tenderwave, Inc. He expects Hydrodyne to create
about 100 new jobs around Buena Vista, where poultry is a big part of the
economy.
"What first sold me on the project was Morse's extensive knowledge of
meat science and muscle biology--and his and Long's enthusiasm," says
Staton. "Then I went to a meat industry conference in San Antonio, Texas.
When I saw how well the technology was received by the meat processors, I made
up my mind."

Food technologists Marnie Bigner and Ernie Paroczay record tenderness data for
cooked meat.
(K8062-3)
|
"The Hydrodyne process could be used by companies that sell meat to
hotels, restaurants, and supermarkets," Solomon explains. "It could
give top-quality tenderness to lower grade cuts."
Currently, ranchers and farmers earn more money for beef with extra marbling
fat interwoven within the lean muscle tissue. Marbling increases meat's
tenderness, flavor, and juiciness, but excess fat in the human diet may pose a
health risk.
Some high-end beef retailers "age" the top-quality cuts in a
carefully controlled, refrigerated environment. This dry-aging breaks down
muscle proteins, increasing tenderness but it's expensive, because of lengthy
storage time and weight loss during aging. Dry-aged steaks rarely make an
appearance outside of star-quality restaurants.
The Hydrodyne process could become the great equalizer giving tenderness to
less-marbled, budget-grade meat. It would benefit consumers by giving them a
product that is not only tender, but lower in fat, as well.
A Peacetime Use for Explosives
Throughout John Long's career as a mechanical engineer, he worked with
explosives at Lawrence Livermore. His mission: preparing the Nation's defense.
He always wondered if the explosives he studied could be used for peaceful
ends--like tenderizing meat. Then, after more than 10 years of retirement and
long after the Cold War's end, he began pursuing the Hydrodyne concept in
earnest.
But he needed someone who could evaluate the technology from a meat industry
perspective. Enter Morse Solomon. The two began preliminary work in 1992 and
signed a formal cooperative research and development agreement in 1993.
"Morse evaluated the meat we tested with the original prototype,"
says Long. "He told me meat industry people usually get excited when they
hear about a 40-percent improvement in tenderness. But he was measuring 50- to
72-percent tenderness improvements with Hydrodyne. Solomon was so impressed, he
rechecked the results three times before he became a believer.
The Big Whammy
Visitors at the Hydrodyne plant can't see meat as it's being tenderized.

ARS food technologist Morse Solomon (left) and Tenderwave's Eric Staton prepare
a test of the Hydrodyne process, which can tenderize up to 600 pounds of primal
cuts at a time.
(K8059-13)
|
First of all, the 7,000-pound steel tank where the meat, water, and
explosive are placed is covered with an 8-foot, 5,000-pound steel dome. The
tank is embedded 10 feet in the ground. The dome is needed because when the
tenderizing charge goes off about 2 feet from the meat, it generates enough
force to push the water out of the tank and into the dome. The meat is first
packaged to protect it from absorbing water and foreign contaminants.
Visitors also can't see the supersonic shock waves from the exploded charge
travel through the water and tear certain muscle proteins in the meat.
Though they pass through water and meat, the shock waves bounce off anything
that does not match the acoustic density of the water, such as the steel sides
of the Hydrodyne tank. As the shock waves rebound off the tank wall, they
intersect, compounding the force. Total forces can reach as high as 40,000
pounds per square inch. Yet, when done correctly, tenderizing by Hydrodyne
doesn't damage or discolor meat. The technique also appears to work evenly
throughout an entire piece.
So 600 pounds of subprimal cuts of untenderized, deboned beef get tenderized
very quickly--within a few thousandths of a second. The same is true for
poultry, pork, lamb, and other meats.
Cooked Hydrodyne-tenderized steaks were rated by a panel of testers trained
by ARS food scientist Brad Berry. This panel ranked Hydrodyne's effects on the
tenderness of Select-grade cuts, which are less tender than the two top grades
of beef, Prime and Choice.
The panel ranked the meat for tenderness, flavor, and juiciness using
sensory evaluation guidelines developed by the American Meat Science
Association. They gave Hydrodyne high marks.
On the eight-point tenderness scale, Hydrodyne-processed Select steaks
averaged a seven, a full point higher than untenderized Select steaks. The
scores for Hydrodyne steaks were equivalent to top-quality Prime steaks in
tenderness.
And the studies by the Beltsville scientists did more than just evaluate the
technology's tenderizing potential. Solomon has more recently found that
Hydrodyne may kill bacteria, thus making meat safer.--By
Jill Lee, Agricultural Research
Service Information Staff.
Morse B. Solomon and
Bradford W. Berry are in the
USDA-ARS Meat
Science Research Laboratory, Bldg. 201, 10300 Baltimore Ave., Beltsville,
MD 20705-2350; fax (301) 504-8438.
[Solomon] phone (301) 504-8463. [Berry] phone (301) 504-8994.
"Hydrodyne Exploding Meat Tenderness" was published in the
June 1998 issue of Agricultural Research magazine. Click
here to see this issue's table of
contents.
[Top]
|