4.7 Article

Small Peptides Hydrolyzed from Pea Protein and Their Maillard Reaction Products as Taste Modifiers: Saltiness, Umami, and Kokumi Enhancement

Journal

FOOD AND BIOPROCESS TECHNOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue 6, Pages 1132-1141

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11947-021-02630-1

Keywords

Pea protein hydrolysate; Maillard reaction products; Salt reduction; Taste enhancement

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFD0400105]
  2. National First-Class Discipline program of the Food Science and Technology [JUFSTR20180204]
  3. Deanship of Scientific Research at King Saud University [RG-1440-020]

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Pea protein was used to prepare Maillard reaction products through enzymatic hydrolysis and thermal reaction, resulting in significant saltiness improvement. Low-molecular-weight pea peptides had the strongest effect on saltiness and umami enhancement, with a more pronounced effect from MRPs derived from hexoses than pentoses. The increase in saltiness was most dominant at 1 hour of thermal reaction, while further heating led to a decrease in saltiness enhancement due to reaction of small tasty peptides. Kokumi attribute was mainly contributed by MRPs of small peptides.
Pea protein was used to prepare the Maillard reaction products (MRPs) through enzymatic hydrolysis and further thermal reaction with reducing sugar. A pronounced saltiness improvement in NaCl solution was observed by the addition of hydrolysates and their MRPs. Low-molecular-weight pea peptides had the strongest effect of saltiness and umami enhancement. The saltiness-enhancing effect of MRPs derived from hexoses was higher than that from pentoses. Molecular weight distribution and amino acid content of MRPs prepared under different time revealed that the hydrolysis of peptides and the initial Maillard reaction of hydrolysis products were dominant at 1 h of thermal reaction. With the extension of heating time, further reaction of small tasty peptides led to a decrease in the saltiness enhancement. The kokumi attribute was mainly contributed by the MRPs of small peptides. When the dosage of MRPs was 0.7% coupled with 0.4% NaCl, the saltiness of the solution was higher than that of the control (0.5% NaCl), which meant that the saltiness was not weakened even when the NaCl concentration was reduced by 20%. The results of the electronic tongue analysis were consistent with that of the sensory evaluation.

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