AI Article Synopsis

  • * The optimal extraction conditions were found to be 59.49°C and 3.03 hours, yielding 12.52% gelatin with a gel strength of 263.37 g.
  • * Compared to commercial gelatin, the goat skin gelatin had a lower pH, a darker color, and exhibited superior emulsifying properties and gel strength, suggesting its potential as a valuable gelatin source.

Article Abstract

The practical use of Korean native black goat skin as a source of gelatin extraction is limited. The objective of this study was to optimize the extraction temperature and time of gelatin from Korean native black goat skin, and to compare the quality characteristics of goat skin gelatin and other commercial gelatin products. Response surface methodology was applied to optimize the extraction temperature and time of gelatin obtained from native Korean black goat skin. The effects of temperature (50°C-70°C) and time (2-4 h) on extraction yield and gel strength were investigated using a face-centered central composite design with 13 experiments. Gelatin extraction from Korean native black goat skin was prepared through the serial processes of alkali pre-treatment, bleaching, neutralization, hot-water extraction, and freeze-drying. Using the optimization plot of Minitab software, the optimized conditions for extracting temperature and time of goat skin gelatin were 59.49°C and 3.03 h, and the optimized values of extraction yield and gel strength were 12.52% and 263.37 g, respectively. Based on a quality comparison of goat skin gelatin with commercial gelatin, the pH value of gelatin extracted from Korean native black goat skin was 5.57. The color of gelatin extracted from Korean native black goat skin was darker than that of commercial gelatin (p<0.05). Higher emulsifying properties and gel strength of goat skin gelatin were observed when compared to those of commercial gelatin (p<0.05). Therefore, the results of this study indicate that Korean native black goat skin may be a valuable source for gelatin extraction.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9890359PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5851/kosfa.2022.e58DOI Listing

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