Increasing consumer demand for high-quality, additive-free fruit and vegetable products with 'fresh-like' sensory properties has led to the development of novel 'minimal processing' technologies. As a prime example, high pressure processing (HPP) is increasingly applied as an alternative to thermal processing (TP) to maintain the properties of fresh fruit-based juices and smoothies. However, the resulting products need to be validated from a sensory standpoint.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRaw materials, whether it is from the animal or plant kingdom, undergo some kind of (domestic or industrial) processing prior to consumption [...
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCompr Rev Food Sci Food Saf
May 2022
Freezing can maintain a low-temperature environment inside food, reducing water activity and preventing microorganism growth. However, when ice crystals are large, present in high amounts, and/or irregularly distributed, irreversible damage to food can occur. Therefore, ice growth is a vital parameter that needs to be controlled during frozen food processing and storage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProteins from various sources are widely used in the food industry due to their unique functional performances in food products. The functional properties of proteins are somehow dictated by their molecular characteristics, but the exact relationship is not fully understood. This review gives a tangible overview of the methods currently available for determining protein functionality and related molecular characteristics in order to support further research on protein ingredients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFava bean ( L.) is a promising source of proteins that can be potentially used as nutritional and/or functional agents for industrial food applications. Fava ingredients are industrially produced, modified, and utilized for food applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProteins are important macronutrients for the human body to grow and function throughout life. Although proteins are found in most foods, their very dissimilar digestibility must be taking into consideration when addressing the nutritional composition of a diet. This review presents a comprehensive summary of the digestibility of proteins from plants, milk, muscle, and egg.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCompr Rev Food Sci Food Saf
January 2021
High-pressure processing (HPP) has been the most adopted nonthermal processing technology in the food industry with a current ever-growing implementation, and meat products represent about a quarter of the HPP foods. The intensive research conducted in the last decades has described the molecular impacts of HPP on microorganisms and endogenous meat components such as structural proteins, enzyme activities, myoglobin and meat color chemistry, and lipids, resulting in the characterization of the mechanisms responsible for most of the texture, color, and oxidative changes observed when meat is submitted to HPP. These molecular mechanisms with major effect on the safety and quality of muscle foods are comprehensively reviewed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDomestic food processing goes a long way back in time, for example, heat for cooking was used 1 [...
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe domestic processing methods, soaking, cooking (traditional, microwave, pressure), and baking and the industrial processing, autoclaving, baking, and extrusion are used to improve consumption of legumes. The growing awareness of both health and sustainability turns the focus on protein (bio)availability. This paper reports the effect of these processing methods on the legume protein digestibility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShell-loosening is of importance in facilitating shrimp peeling. In this study, enzyme and high pressure (HP) improved the shell-loosening at different degrees, which were observed as gaps by microscopy. The shell-loosening gap induced by an endoprotease with broad specificity (Endocut-03L, 53 μm) was much higher than that induced by HP at 100 MPa (HP100, 12 μm), followed by an endoprotease with high specificity (Tail21, 8 μm), and HP at 600 MPa (HP600, 5 μm).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCombinations of pressure, temperature and time (100-600 MPa, 30-60 °C, 3-10 min) influence enzyme activity of the myrosinase-glucosinolate system. Seedlings of Brussels sprouts were used as a model, which constitutes a well-defined and homogenous sample matrix with simple cell structures. A response surface methodology approach was used to determine the combined effect of pressure level, temperature and time on glucosinolate concentration and myrosinase activity in Brussels sprouts seedlings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of partially replacing fishmeal in aquafeed with feathermeal (FTH) at three levels (0%: FTH0, 8%: FTH8, 24%: FTH24) and two extrusion temperatures (100 and 130 °C) was evaluated in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) with respect to growth performance, metabolism response, and oxidative status of the feed proteins. Multivariate data analyses revealed that FTH24 correlated positively with high levels of oxidation products, amino acids (AA) racemization, glucogenic AAs level in liver, feed intake (FI), specific growth rate (SGR), and feed conversion ratio (FCR); and low AAs digestibility. Both FI and SGR were significantly increased when 8 and 24% feathermeal was included in the feed extruded at 100 °C, while there was a negative effect on FCR in fish fed FTH24.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, enzyme-assisted extraction was performed to extract umami taste and total free amino acids (FAAs) from the six different mushrooms including shiitake (Lentinus edodes), oyster (Pleurotus ostreatus), tea tree (Agrocybe aegerita) and, white, brown and portobello champignons (Agaricus bisporus). β-Glucanase and Flavourzyme® were used as the enzymes for cell wall and proteins hydrolysis, respectively. It was found that β-glucanase treatment alone did not enhance the extraction efficiency, however in combination, β-glucanase and Flavourzyme® enhanced the extraction efficiency significantly up to 20-fold compared to conventional HCl mediated extraction, depending on the mushroom species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComplementary methodologies were used to analyse the pressure-induced modification and functionality of myofibrillar proteins from pork meat pressurised at 200, 400, 600, or 800 MPa (10 min, 5 or 20 °C). Pressure at 400 MPa was found to be the threshold for loss of solubility, and the structural proteins, myosin and actin, lost their native solubility due to aggregation. The results from the extraction of proteins with different reagents targeting the disruption of specific molecular interactions suggested that pressure-induced aggregation was caused mainly by hydrogen bonding during pressurisation and not hydrophobic interactions nor disulphide cross-links.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnatto and bixin, the main carotenoid of annatto seeds, were both found to inhibit cholesterol oxidation in minced herring (Clupea harengus) and minced mackerel (Scomber scombrus) during high pressure processing (600 MPa for 10 min) and subsequent chilled storage for 2 wk, a treatment which otherwise increased the content of cholesterol oxidation products above a critical limit for human consumption. Annatto but not bixin reduced the loss of docosahexaenoic acid caused by high pressure processing of herring from 12% to 7%, an effect assigned to antioxidative effects of phenolic compounds in annatto, while bixin as a carotenoid binds to membranes protecting membrane cholesterol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe generation of radicals during high pressure (HP) processing of beef loin and chicken breast was studied by spin trapping and electron spin resonance detection. The pressurization resulted in a higher level of spin adducts in the beef loin than in the chicken breast. It was shown that radicals were formed in the sarcoplasmic and myofibrillar fractions as well as in the non-soluble protein fraction due to the HP treatment, indicating that other radicals than iron-derived radicals were formed, and most likely protein-derived radicals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of high pressure (HP) treatment (400 MPa, 10 min) of porcine longissimus dorsi was investigated using reflectance spectroscopy and by UV-vis and circular dichroism spectroscopy for the soluble protein fraction. The soluble protein content was expectedly lowered significantly by HP treatment, whereas the solid state fraction of the meat responded to HP by exhibition of characteristic spectral changes in the visible reflectance data with a temporal evolution over the course of 2 days. However, the soluble protein fraction did not exhibit the same altered spectral characteristics in the visible region as seen in the solid state following HP, and there were no indications of altered folding of the proteins that remain in solution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColor stability of minced cured restructured ham was studied by considering the effects of high pressure (HP) (600 MPa, 13°C, 5 min), raw meat pH24 (low, normal, high), salt content (15, 30 g/kg), drying (20%, 50% weight loss), and residual oxygen level (0.02%-0.30%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCalcium(II) precipitates with palmitate (Pal(-)), a process affecting calcium absorption in the gut, in a first-order reaction, as followed by a calcium electrode in neutral aqueous solution for excess of calcium(II), with a rate constant showing a minimum at physiological ionic strength of 0.32 ± 0.09 d(-1) at 25°C with a stoichiometry of 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe kinetics of the formation of radicals in meat by high pressure processing (HPP) has been described for the first time. A threshold for the radicals to form at 400 MPa at 25 °C and at 500 MPa at 5 °C has been found. Above this threshold, an increased formation of radicals was observed with increasing pressure (400-800 MPa), temperature (5-40 °C) and time (0-60 min).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to study the effect of high-pressure (HP) treatment and two different methods of brine addition (important for lysosomal membrane destabilisation) on lysosomal enzymes activity and protein degradation, pork semitendinosus muscle was brine enhanced by injection or tumbling, and HP treated at 600 MPa following storage at 2 °C for up to 8 weeks. In this report a novel protocol for SDS gelatin zymography was established, and an increase of cathepsin B and L activity after HP treatment was shown followed by a decrease during storage. No calpain activity was detected following HP treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe color of pork longissimus dorsi high pressure (HP) treated at 200 to 800 MPa at 5 and 20 °C for 10 min was determined to a high degree by pressure level and to a lesser degree by temperature. Severe color changes appeared up to a threshold pressure at 400 MPa. HP treatment at 20 °C compared to 5 °C resulted in meat, which was less red and slightly lighter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe combined effect of high pressure processing (HPP) (400, 600 and 800 MPa) and carrot fibre (CF) and potato starch (PS) on low salt (1.2%) pork sausages was investigated and compared with high (1.8%) salt sausages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVegetable bouillon paste, prepared by dry-mixing of pre-produced dry ingredients with addition of semisolid palm oil, was stored at the slightly elevated temperature of 40°C for up to 12weeks for comparing modified atmosphere packaging (MAP; oxygen concentration initially below 0.5%) packaging with free availability of oxygen in order to identify the mechanisms leading to quality degradation. An increased browning and increased formation of volatile compounds related to Maillard reactions and oxidation of secondary lipid oxidation products were observed for the vegetable bouillon paste stored without limiting the oxygen availability.
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