| Literature DB >> 29579986 |
Naiara R Costa1, Leandro P Cappato1, Marcus Vinicius S Ferreira1, Roberto P S Pires2, Jeremias Moraes2, Erick A Esmerino3, Ramon Silva4, Roberto P C Neto5, Maria Inês B Tavares5, Mônica Q Freitas3, Raimundo N Silveira Júnior6, Flávio N Rodrigues6, Rodrigo C Bisaggio7, Rodrigo N Cavalcanti8, Renata S L Raices2, Marcia C Silva2, Adriano G Cruz9.
Abstract
The use of Ohmic Heating (OH) for sweet whey processing was investigated in this study. Whey samples were subjected to both different OH parameters (2, 4, 5, 7 and 9 V·cm-1 at 60 Hz, up to 72-75 °C/15 s) and conventional processing (72-75 °C/15 s). Physicochemical analyses (pH), color measurements (L*, a*, b*), rheological properties (flow curves and particle size distribution), microstructure (optical microscopy), bioactive compounds (ACE and antioxidant capacity), microbiological characterization (mesophilic bacteria, total coliforms, and thermotolerant coliforms), water mobility (TD-magnetic resonance domain), and sensory evaluation (descriptive analysis) were carried out. The OH effects on sweet whey characteristics depended on the applied electric field intensity. Higher saturation, higher color variation (ΔE*), and higher luminosity (L*) were observed in low electric fields. For bioactive compounds, the increase of the electric field negatively affected the preservation of the antioxidant capacity and the ACE Inhibitory Activity of bioactive peptides. OH and conventional samples exhibited a pseudo-plastic behavior (n < 1). OH performed at 4 and 5 V·cm-1 was able to provide similar levels of sensory profile and higher volatile compounds levels. The results suggested the OH technology as an interesting alternative to whey processing.Entities:
Keywords: Bioactive compounds; Ohmic Heating; Rheology parameters; Sensory profiling; Sweet whey; Volatile profiling
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29579986 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2018.01.046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Res Int ISSN: 0963-9969 Impact factor: 6.475