Advertisement
By Harold McGee
Published 2004
Glycogen, or “animal starch,” is an animal carbohydrate similar to amylopectin, though more highly branched. It’s a fairly minor component of animal tissue and so of meats, although its concentration at the time of slaughter will affect the ultimate pH of the meat, and thereby its texture.
From the book On Food and Cooking (2nd edition) by Harold McGee. © 2004 Harold McGee. By permission of Scribner, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.