Literature DB >> 35153316

High-intensity ultrasound as pre-treatment in the development of fermented whey and oat beverages: effect on the fermentation, antioxidant activity and consumer acceptance.

Ana Luisa Herrera-Ponce1, Ivan Salmeron-Ochoa2, Jose Carlos Rodriguez-Figueroa3, Eduardo Santellano-Estrada1, Ivan Adrian Garcia-Galicia1, Alma Delia Alarcon-Rojo1.   

Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate the effect of high-intensity ultrasound as pre-treatment in the development of fermented whey and oat beverages. Oat malt was produced, incorporated into a whey formulation (35, 50 and 65% v/v of whey) and ultrasonicated (at 40 kHz and 11 W/cm2) for 0, 3 or 10 min, prior to fermentation with L. casei 431. The treatments were identified as 35/65/0, 50/50/0, 65/35/0, 35/65/3, 50/50/3, 65/35/3, 35/65/10, 50/50/10 and 65/35/10, referring to the whey percentage, oat percentage, and the ultrasound time (min), respectively. The beverages 50/50/0 and 50/50/3 registered the highest (P < 0.05) growth with 1.96 and 2.00 log CFU ml, respectively. In general, the final average population of L. casei 431 was 7 to 8.86 log CFU/ml, being this adequate for a probiotic beverage. The highest antioxidant activity was found in the 35/65/3, 35/65/10, 50/50/3 and 50/50/10 beverages without difference (P < 0.05) among them. There was no effect of gender on the acceptance of the probiotic beverages. The best accepted beverage by women was 50/50/3 and both genders disliked the beverage 35/65/10. There was no relationship between the acceptance of the beverages and the consumers' habit by fermented milk beverages. No difference in the preference between the 50/50/0 and the 50/50/3 beverage was found. It is concluded that the probiotic beverage containing 50% whey and 50% oat and ultrasonicated for 3 min generated the highest levels of L. casei 431 growth, high antioxidant activity and good consumer acceptance and preference. © Association of Food Scientists & Technologists (India) 2021.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Lactobacillus casei 431; Oat; Probiotic beverage; Sensory; Ultrasound; Whey

Year:  2021        PMID: 35153316      PMCID: PMC8814079          DOI: 10.1007/s13197-021-05074-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Food Sci Technol        ISSN: 0022-1155            Impact factor:   2.701


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