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I was considering slow-cooking pork with pineapple, but was concerned on the effect the pineapple might have on the texture of the meat. I understand that both bromelain and acid can deteriorate the texture of meat. Is the concern legit in this case?

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  • The pineapple could probably go in quite late to a slow cook, it would not need anywhere near the same duration as the pork. That should reduce any effect.
    – Orbling
    Mar 25, 2011 at 0:26

1 Answer 1

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Bromelain, at least, won't be a problem, for two reasons. First, although bromelain exists in all parts of the plant, the enzyme exists in larger quantities in the stem. This, plus the fact that the stems are left over after harvest, are why the enzyme is typically extracted from the stem for meat tenderizers.

Second, bromelain is heat labile, which means that heat will denature (deform) the protein and reduce or eliminate is enzymatic activity. Slow cooking should take care of that.

So that leaves the acids. Acids, in general, also denature the proteins of the meat, which is why they are frequently used in marinades, though some contend how useful they are in that respect. Pineapple pH is 3.3-5.2, which isn't too bad. For comparison, lemons are pH 2.2-2.4, and since that's a logarithmic scale, it means that lemon juice is at least ten times as acidic. Since you're also slow-cooking, all things considered, I don't think it is going to have much effect.

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    I'm not sure if it adds much to your answer, since I only have an appeal to authority to back it up (not experience), but here goes. These guys claim that if you use pineapple in a marinade it may turn the meat into mush. Since marinading happens at low temperatures, this is consistent with your claim that bromelain denatures under heat. (This is corroborated by this wikipedia page which claims that cooked or canned pineapple does not tenderize meat.)
    – Erik P.
    Mar 24, 2011 at 23:24
  • Thanks for the great info. I ended up using canned pineapple so the enzyme was already de-activated.
    – Ray
    Mar 28, 2011 at 11:32

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