| Literature DB >> 35326135 |
Noman Walayat1, Jianhua Liu1, Asad Nawaz2, Rana Muhammad Aadil3, María López-Pedrouso4, José M Lorenzo5,6.
Abstract
Texture is an important parameter in determining the quality characteristics and consumer acceptability of seafood and fish protein-based products. The addition of food-based additives as antioxidants (monosaccharides, oilgosaccharides, polysaccharides and protein hydrolysates) in surimi and other seafood products has become a promising trend at an industrial scale. Improvement in gelling, textural and structural attributes of surimi gel could be attained by inhibiting the oxidative changes, protein denaturation and aggregation with these additives along with new emerging processing techniques. Moreover, the intermolecular crosslinking of surimi gel can be improved with the addition of different food hydrocolloid-based antioxidants in combination with modern processing techniques. The high-pressure processing (HPP) technique with polysaccharides can develop surimi gel with better physicochemical, antioxidative, textural attributes and increase the gel matrix than conventional processing methods. The increase in protein oxidation, denaturation, decline in water holding capacity, gel strength and viscoelastic properties of surimi gel can be substantially improved by microwave (MW) processing. The MW, ultrasonication and ultraviolet (UV) treatments can significantly increase the textural properties (hardness, gumminess and cohesiveness) and improve the antioxidative properties of surimi gel produced by different additives. This study will review potential opportunities and primary areas of future exploration for high-quality surimi gel products. Moreover, it also focuses on the influence of different antioxidants as additives and some new production strategies, such as HPP, ultrasonication, UV and MW and ohmic processing. The effects of additives in combination with different modern processing technologies on surimi gel texture are also compared.Entities:
Keywords: additives; processing; surimi; textural properties
Year: 2022 PMID: 35326135 PMCID: PMC8944868 DOI: 10.3390/antiox11030486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Role of different additives in the enhanced surimi gel properties.
| Additives | Role | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sucrose and sorbitol | Saccharids, cryoprotectants and functional | Improved the structural properties, conserving three dimensional and improving the protein stability in common carp surimi | [ |
| mTGase | Microbial and protein cross-linker | Increased the surimi gel strength and viscoelastic attributes by improving the intermolecular cross-linking of protein molecules | [ |
| Sulfated polysaccharide (SP) | Antioxidants, nutritional and functional | The addition of SP enhanced the textural and water-holding properties of silver carp surimi gel by reducing the oxidative changes | [ |
| Fucoidan polysaccharide | Antioxidants and antibacterial | Fuoxidan polysaccharide enhanced the hardness, gumminess and water-binding characteristics of surimi gel by promoting the cross-linking of protein molecules. | [ |
| Kappa carrageenan (KC) | Polysaccharide, antioxidant and cryoprotectant | Addition of KC in surimi gel enhanced the gel strength and textural properties. Meanwhile, improved the viscoelastic properties. | [ |
| Konjac glucomannan (KGM) | Oligosaccharide, antioxidant and functional | Incorporation of KOG increased the textural and antioxidative properties by inhibiting the movement of free water molecules. | [ |
| Skipjack roe protein hydrolysate (SRPH) | Antioxidant and emulsifier | SRPH restarted the protein and lipid oxidation in sausage. | [ |
| Protein hydrolysate (PH) | Antioxidants, physiological and protein functional enhancer | PH addition in silver carp surimi gel reduced the protein oxidative changes and enhanced the gel-forming abilities. | [ |
Figure 1Surimi gelling properties with and without incorporation of additives. Microstructure figures reprinted from Walayat, Xiong, Xiong, Moreno, Li, Nawaz, Zhang, Wang and Niaz [8].
Figure 2Surimi gel prepared with non-conventional and conventional techniques. Non-conventional techniques show a more stable and well-established gel network than conventional processing equipment.
Role of modern processing techniques on enhanced textural properties of surimi gel.
| Processing Technique | Additives | Role | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HPP | Kappa-carrageenan (KC) | Oligosaccharids, antioxidants and cryoprotectants | Surimi gel treated with KC showed better WHC and gel strength on HPP (300 MPa), by improving the water state and structural properties. | [ |
| HPP | mTGase | Microbial | The mTGase treated surimi gel showed increased fracture stress, strain and gel strength when cooked at 300 MPa processing. | [ |
| Ultrasonication | Soybean polysaccharide (SSPS) | Polysaccharide, antioxidants, funtional and gelling | The SSPS added surimi gel revealed enhanced whiteness and gelling properties during frozen storage combined with ultrasonication. | [ |
| Ultrasonication | Wheat gluten (WG) | Protien additive, functional and gelling | Wheat gluten-SPI gels with ultrasonication led to increase in textural properties by improving β-sheets, decreased α-helices and β-turns. | [ |
| Microwave | NaCl | Functional and mechanical | The mechanical, structural and textural characteristics of NaCl-treated surimi gel improved after 80 s heating of MW (15 W/g). | [ |
| Microwave | Konjac glucomannan (KGM) | Oligosaccharide, antioxidant and functional | Microwave heated KGM surimi gel displayed better starching of protein molecules and dense KGM-protein network. | [ |
| Ultraviolet | Konjac flour (KF) | Dietary fiber, gelling | KF (1%) and 250 nm UV for 40 min increased the gel hardness (63.2 N) and springiness (0.84). | [ |
| Ohmic heating | Corn starch (CS) | Carbohydrate, functional and thermo-stable | CS-surimi gel displayed inferior gel network due to starch gelatinization. But the control surimi gel exhibited improved hardness and gel strength when processed with ohmic technique as compared to water bath cooked gel. | [ |
| Ohmic heating | Diced carrot (DC) | Sensory and functional | DC added surimi of Pacific whiting (PW) and Alaska Pollock (AP) reported increased hardness and cohesiveness when ohmically heated at 90 °C. | [ |