Publications by authors named "Estelle Fischer"

Food irradiation is a preservation technique and in respect with regulations, is applied to a limited number of products. Nevertheless, this technique could be interesting for products sensitive to heat treatment, and to limit alteration caused to their organoleptic characteristics. This study concerns the potential of ionization for vegetable proteins, to limit the damage on the sensory properties that can be caused by thermal treatments.

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Vegetable proteins are in high demand due to current issues surrounding meat consumption and changes in eating habits, but they are still not accepted by consumers due to their strong bitterness, astringent taste, and "beany" off-flavor. This review aimed to give an overview of the "beany" off-flavor and the potential of microorganisms to decrease it. Twenty-six volatile compounds were identified from the literature as contributing to the "beany" off-flavor, and their formation pathways were identified in a legume matrix, pea.

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Vegetal proteins are of high interest for their many positive aspects, but their 'beany' off-flavor is still limiting the consumer's acceptance. The aim of this work was to investigate the conservation of pea protein isolate (PPI) during time and especially the evolution of their organoleptic quality under two storage conditions. The evolution of the volatile compounds, the odor and the color of a PPI has been investigated during one year of storage.

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HS-SPME-GC-MS is widely used to characterize the profile of volatile compounds despite some bad uses with a lack of information on the precision and repeatability of this technique. This work proposes a method, including a calibration step, to determine the global volatile compounds profile of a pea protein isolate at different pH of extraction. At the same time, nine compounds of interest were semi-quantified: hexanal, nonanal, 2-nonenal, 3-methylbutanal, benzaldehyde, 1-octen-3-ol, 3-octen-2-one, 2-pentylfuran, and 2,5-dimethylpyrazine.

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Reported salt levels in whole-muscle cured meat products differ substantially within and among European countries, providing substantial scope for salt reduction across this sector. The objective of this study was to identify the minimum acceptable salt levels in typical whole-muscle cured products in terms of physicochemical, microbial and sensorial properties. Salt levels in a small selection of commercial Irish meat products were determined to establish a baseline for reduction.

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