| Literature DB >> 27004110 |
Aijun Yang1, Heather Smyth2, Mridusmita Chaliha3, Andrew James1.
Abstract
The oxidation of unsaturated lipids by lipoxygenases in soybeans causes undesirable flavors in soy foods. Using a traditional and a nontraditional soy food user group, we examined the cultural difference in perceiving the sensory characteristics of soymilk and tofu produced from soybeans with or without lipoxygenases (Lx123). The two groups described the samples using similar terms. The traditional users preferred the control soy milk and lipoxygenase-free tofu while the nontraditional users preferred the lipoxygenase-free soymilk with no preference for tofu. In a separate study, a trained descriptive taste panel compared the odor of soymilk and tofu from control soybeans or those lacking lipoxygenase-1 and lipoxygenase-2 (Lx12) or all three isomers (Lx123). The rancid/grassy odor was rated the lowest in Lx123 products, followed by Lx12 products with the control products given the highest rating. The Lx12 and Lx123 products were also sweeter and less bitter than the controls. Taken together, our results demonstrated that soybeans lacking lipoxygenases can produce soy foods with less undesirable aromas and are therefore likely more acceptable to the consumers.Entities:
Keywords: Lipoxygenase; sensory quality; soy milk; soybean; tofu
Year: 2015 PMID: 27004110 PMCID: PMC4779487 DOI: 10.1002/fsn3.274
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Sci Nutr ISSN: 2048-7177 Impact factor: 2.863
Figure 1Sodium dodecyl‐polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis profile of seed proteins from control, Lx12 or Lx 123 soybeans.
Profiles of participants involved in soy focus group study
| Age range (years) | Ethnicity | Soy product consumption | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nontraditional soy product users | 2 male5 female | 20–70 | Anglo‐Australian | Daily – never |
| Traditional soy product users | 1 male5 female | 40 | Chinese | Daily – weekly |
Sensory descriptors and vocabulary from the training session in the preliminary evaluation of control and LOX‐free soymilk and tofu
| LOX‐free soymilk | Control soymilk |
|---|---|
| Yellowish Cooked pasta, floury, evaporated milk, cooked, sour, grassy, raw, less intense/subtle, beany, sweet floral, raw soySoy, painty, potato, alfalfa sprouts, snow pea, green‐sweet, macadamia, savory, soft‐nutty sourness, sweeter, less intense | Off‐white, lighter color, thicker looking“Typical” Chinese‐style, strong, stale‐earthy, starchy, raw beans, green, floral, nutty, chalky, rancid, flour and water paste, raw green peaRaw beans, soy, fresh veg, grassy, aged oil/rancid, painty, green astringent, earthy, bitterness, legume, dry milk, more intense |
Sensory attributes and definitions developed and used in the sensory descriptive study of control and LOX‐free soymilk and tofu
| Attribute | Definition |
|---|---|
|
| The overall intensity of the samples aroma from subtle to intense |
|
| A fresh pea, cucumber, melon‐like or lettuce aroma |
|
| A grassy rancid aroma, sappy, sour, raw and painty, like rancid oil |
|
| A floury, starchy, potato‐like aroma, reminiscent of clay and earth |
|
| The overall flavor intensity of the sample when in the mouth |
|
| The perceived sweetness of samples experienced in the mouth |
|
| The perceived bitterness of samples experienced in the mouth |
Figure 2Difference in preference between an Australian (n = 8) and a native Chinese (n = 6) panel for control and LOX‐free soymilk and tofu.
Figure 3Major volatiles in control soymilk and LOX‐free soymilk.
Figure 4Hexanal peak area for tofu and soymilk after 1 and 8 days of storage at 4°C
Seed characteristics of control, Lx1‐2 null and Lx1‐3 null samples
| Control | Lx12 | Lx123 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seed wt (g/100 seeds) | 26.49a
| 21.49b | 25.34a |
| Oil (%) | 19.80 | 20.09 | 19.75 |
| Protein (%) | 39.56b | 44.33a | 42.86ab |
| Major fatty acids | |||
| C16:0 | 10.18 | 9.99 | 10.33 |
| C18:0 | 1.53 | 1.78 | 1.63 |
| C18:1c | 20.03 | 20.67 | 23.36 |
| C18:2 | 53.34 | 51.50 | 49.55 |
| C18:3 | 9.09 | 9.52 | 8.82 |
| PUFA ratio (18:2/18:3) (PR) | 5.73 | 5.41 | 5.62 |
| Total SFA | 14.13 | 14.25 | 14.26 |
| Total PUFA | 61.53 | 61.02 | 58.37 |
| Total PUFA/Total SFA (PI) | 4.36 | 4.28 | 4.09 |
| Total volatile increase in full‐fat soy meal after 1 week storage at 37°C | 4.10a | 1.32b | 1.38b |
SFA, saturated fatty acids; PUFA, polyunsaturated fatty acids; PR, polyunsaturation ratio; PI, polyunsaturation index.
Means with the same superscripts within the same row are not statistically different, P > 0.05.
Figure 5Plot of sensory scores for soymilk (A) and silken tofu (B) samples. n = 3 × 11, for each sensory attribute, the scores with a different letter are significantly different (P < 0.05).