Albumen, fibrine, and caseine are the principal nitrogenous constituents of food, and as they are employed in the reparation of the nitrogenous tissues of the animal body, they have been termed flesh-formers.
The fat and oil of animals are derived either from vegetable oil and fat, or from some such substance as starch or sugar. The constituents of food which form fat are termed fat-formers, and sometimes heat-givers or respiratory elements, from the notion that their slow combustion in the animal body is the chief cause of its high temperature.
The mineral elements of the body are furnished principally by the varieties of food which contain nitrogen. The whey of milk is rich in them; but they do not exist in pure butter, in starch, or in sugar.
Fat is a much more abundant constituent of the animal body than is generally supposed, That this substance should constitute the greater portion of the weight of an obese pig seems probable enough; but few are aware that even in a lean sheep there is 50 per cent. more fat than lean.
For a very accurate knowledge of the relative proportions of the fatty, nitrogenous, and mineral constituents of the carcasses of animals used as human food, we are indebted to Messrs. Lawes and Gilbert. Before these investigators turned their attention to this subject, it had scarcely attracted the notice of scientific men; but a notion appears to have been current, amongst non-scientific people, at least, that in all, save the fattest animals, the lean flesh greatly preponderated over the fat. That this idea was unsustained by a foundation of fact, has been clearly proved by the results of an investigation[!--3--][3] undertaken a few years ago by Messrs. Lawes and Gilbert—an investigation which I cannot avoid characterising as one of the most laborious and apparently trustworthy on record. The mere statement of the results of this inquiry occupies 187 pages of one of the huge volumes of the Transactions of the Royal Society—a fact which best indicates the immensity of the labour which these gentlemen imposed upon themselves, and which, independently of their other and numerous contributions to scientific agriculture, entitles their names to most honourable mention in the annals of science.
I shall now briefly advert to a few of the more important facts established by Lawes and Gilbert. From a large number of oxen, sheep, and pigs, on which feeding experiments were being conducted, ten individuals were selected. These were, a fat calf, a half-fat ox, a moderately fat ox, a fat lamb, a store sheep, a half-fat old sheep, a fat sheep, a very fat sheep, a store pig, and a fat pig. These animals were killed, and the different organs and parts of their bodies were separately weighed and analysed. The results were, that, with the exception of the calf, all the animals contained, respectively, more fat than lean. The fat ox and the fat lamb contained each three times as much fat as lean flesh, and the proportion of the fatty matters to the nitrogenous constituents of the carcass of the very fat sheep was as 4 to 1. In the pig the fat greatly preponderated over the lean; the store pig containing three times as much, and the fat pig five times as much fat as lean.
That part of the animal which is consumed as food by man, is termed the carcass by the butcher, and contains by far the greater portion of the fat of the animal. The offal, in the language of the butcher, constitutes those parts which are not commonly consumed as human food, at least by the well-to-do classes. In calves, oxen, lambs, and sheep, the offal embraces the skin, the feet, and the head, and all the internal organs, excepting the kidneys and their fatty envelope. The offal of the pig is made up of all the internal organs, excepting the kidneys and kidney fat. It is the relative proportion of fat in the carcasses analysed by Lawes and Gilbert that I have stated; but as the nitrogenous matters occur in greatest quantity in the offal, it is necessary that the relative proportions of the constituents of the body, taken as a whole, should be considered. On an average, then, it will be found that a fat fully-grown animal will contain 49 per cent. of water, 33 per cent. of dry fat, 13 per cent. of dry nitrogenous matter—muscles separated from fat, hide, &c.—and 3 per cent. of mineral matter. In a lean animal the average proportions of the various constituents will be 54 per cent. of water, 25½ per cent. dry fat, 17 per cent. of dry nitrogenous substances, and 3½ per cent. of mineral matter. In the following table these proportions are set forth.
| SUMMARY OF THE COMPOSITION OF THE TEN ANIMALS—SHOWING THEPER-CENTAGES OF MINERAL MATTER, DRY NITROGENOUS COMPOUNDS,FAT, TOTAL DRY SUBSTANCE, AND WATER. | ||||||||||||||||
| 1st. In Fresh Carcass. 2nd. In Fresh Offal (equal Sum of Parts,excluding Contents of Stomachs and Intestines). 3rd. In EntireAnimal (Fasted Live-weight, including therefore the weight ofContents of Stomachs and Intestines). | ||||||||||||||||
| Description of Animal. | Per cent. in Carcass. | Per cent. in Offal. | Per cent. in Entire Animal. | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A. | B. | C. | D. | E. | A. | B. | C. | D. | E. | A. | B. | C. | D. | F. | E. | |
| Fat calf | 4·48 | 16·6 | 16·6 | 37·7 | 62·3 | 3·41 | 17·1 | 14·6 | 35·1 | 64·9 | 3·80 | 15·2 | 14·8 | 33·8 | 3·17 | 63·8 |
| Half-fat ox | 5·56 | 17·8 | 22·6 | 46·0 | 54·0 | 4·05 | 20·6 | 15·7 | 40·4 | 59·6 | 4·66 | 16·6 | 19·1 | 40·3 | 8·19 | 51·5 |
| Fat ox | 4·56 | 15·0 | 34·8 | 54·4 | 45·6 | 3·40 | 17·5 | 26·3 | 47·2 | 52·8 | 3·92 | 14·5 | 30·1 | 48·5 | 5·98 | 45·5 |
| Fat lamb | 3·63 | 10·9 | 36·9 | 51·4 | 48·6 | 2·45 | 18·9 | 20·1 | 41·5 | 58·5 | 2·94 | 12·3 | 28·5 | 43·7 | 8·54 | 47·8 |
| Store sheep | 4·36 | 14·5 | 23·8 | 42·7 | 57·3 | 2·19 | 18·0 | 16·1 | 36·3 | 63·7 | 3·16 | 14·8 | 18·7 | 36·7 | 6·00 | 57·3 |
| Half-fat old sheep | 4·13 | 14·9 | 31·3 | 50·3 | 49·7 | 2·72 | 17·7 | 18·5 | 38·9 | 61·1 | 3·17 | 14·0 | 23·5 | 40·7 | 9·05 | 50·2 |
| Fat sheep | 3·45 | 11·5 | 45·4 | 60·3 | 39·7 | 2·32 | 16·1 | 26·4 | 44·8 | 55·2 | 2·81 | 12·2 | 35·6 | 50·6 | 6·02 | 43·4 |
| Extra fat sheep | 2·77 | 9·1 | 55·1 | 67·0 | 33·0 | 3·64 | 16·8 | 34·5 | 54·9 | 45·1 | 2·90 | 10·9 | 45·8 | 59·6 | 5·18 | 35·2 |
| Store pig | 2·57 | 14·0 | 28·1 | 44·7 | 55·3 | 3·07 | 14·0 | 15·0 | 32·1 | 67·9 | 2·67 | 13·7 | 23·3 | 39·7 | 5·22 | 55·1 |
| Fat pig | 1·40 | 10·5 | 49·5 | 61·4 | 38·6 | 2·97 | 14·8 | 22·8 | 40·6 | 59·4 | 1·65 | 10·9 | 42·2 | 54·7 | 3·97 | 41·3 |
| Means of all | 3·69 | 13·5 | 34·4 | 51·6 | 48·4 | 3·02 | 17·2 | 21·0 | 41·2 | 58·8 | 3·17 | 13·5 | 28·2 | 44·9 | 6·13 | 49·0 |
| Means of 8 of the half-fat, fat, and very fat animals | 3·75 | 13·3 | 36·5 | 53·6 | 46·4 | 3·12 | 17·4 | 22·4 | 42·9 | 57·1 | 3·23 | 13·3 | 29·9 | 46·4 | 6·26 | 47·3 |
| Means of 6 of the fat, and very fat animals | 3·38 | 12·3 | 39·7 | 55·4 | 44·6 | 3·03 | 16·9 | 24·1 | 44·0 | 56·0 | 3·00 | 12·7 | 32·8 | 48·5 | 5·48 | 46·0 |
| KEY: | A.—Mineral matter. B.—Dry nitrogenous compounds. C.—Fat. | D.—Dry substance. E.—Water. F.—Contents of viscera. | ||||||||||||||