Crossbred pigs (Landrace x Yorkshire, Duroc x Landrace x Yorkshire; N = 72) were sorted by weight (initial weight 172 ± 20 pounds) and sex, then distributed within 18 pens. Each pen was randomly assigned to one of three experimental diets: traditional control soybean-meal (CTRL), an extruded conventional soybean (CONV), or an extruded high oleic acid soybean (TRU) as the main protein source. The diets were offered during the finishing period until reaching 260 (± 6) pounds. Six slaughter groups were created, harvesting 12 animals/group to ensure uniformity of finishing weight. Thus, animals were retained on test for 34, 37, 41, 42, 48, or 50 days. Animals were humanely harvested at the NDSU meat laboratory.
Final live weight, pre-rigor carcass weight (HCW) and dressing percent were recorded at harvest. After a 24-hour chill (36°F), loin eye depth, loin eye area, subcutaneous fat depth, loin eye color, and marbling scores were taken at the 10th/11th rib interface. The right-side carcass was fabricated into primal cuts (ham, belly, loin, boston butt, and picnic shoulder), which were weighed and expressed as percentage of chilled side weight. A one-inch-thick boneless pork chop was obtained adjacent to the 10th rib for shelf-life analysis. An additional chop was obtained adjacent the 11th rib, vacuum packaged, aged for seven days (36°F), and frozen (10°F) for later analysis. Subcutaneous fat samples were obtained adjacent to the first thoracic vertebra, frozen at 10°F, and saved for fatty acid analysis. Fresh belly firmness was determined by the belly flop test, which consisted of measuring the distance between caudal and cranial ends in a suspended belly on a V-shaped smokehouse stick. Shelf-life was evaluated in a simulated retail display for six days. Pork chops were overwrapped with a plastic film and placed in a retail cooler at 40°F. Minolta L*, b*, and a* measures were recorded daily using a Konica Minolta CR-400 Chroma Meter (Konica Minolta Inc. Ramsey, NJ) as indicators of pigment degradation and spoilage. Pork chops thawed for quality analysis were evaluated for pH, drip loss, subjective marbling, color score, cook loss, and tenderness. Color was recorded from pork chops after 30 minutes exposure to oxygen to allow surface “color blooming.” Raw chop weight was obtained prior to cooking on clamshell grills until reaching an internal temperature of 140°F. The chops were then cooled to room temperature and re-weighed to determine cook loss. Tenderness was evaluated by Warner-Bratzler Shear Force (WBSF). Five round cores (0.5-inch diameter) were removed directionally parallel to the muscle fibers (AMSA, 2016). Each core was sheared by a V-notched cutting blade attached to the WBSF instrument (PPT Group UK Ltd, Slinfold, UK) to record the maximum force to cut through the sample. All data were analyzed using the MIXED procedure of SAS (SAS 9.4, SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC). Repeated measures were used to analyze shelf-life. Differences were considered significant at P ≤ 0.05 with pen as experimental unit.