4.7 Article

Smoothing temperature and ratio of casein to whey protein: Two tools to improve nonfat stirred yogurt properties

期刊

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
卷 104, 期 10, 页码 10485-10499

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2020-20040

关键词

stirred yogurt; microgel particle; syneresis; whey protein; time domain-nuclear magnetic resonance (TD-NMR)

资金

  1. Fonds de recherche du Quebec Nature et technologies (FRQNT
  2. Quebec City, QC, Canada)
  3. Novalait Inc. (Quebec City, QC, Canada)
  4. Ministere de l'Agriculture, des Pecheries et de l'Alimentation du Quebec (MAPAQ
  5. Quebec City, QC, Canada)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigated the control of nonfat yogurt microstructure, textural properties, and syneresis through milk protein composition and smoothing temperature. The results showed that microgels play a crucial role in yogurt texture and are influenced by whey protein content and smoothing temperature. Optimizing these parameters may help improve nonfat stirred dairy gel.
Consumers are not always ready to compromise on the loss of texture and increased syneresis that nonfat stirred yogurts display compared with yogurts that contain fat. In this study, we investigated milk protein composition and smoothing temperature as a means to control nonfat yogurt microstructure, textural properties, and syneresis. Yogurts were prepared with different ratios of casein to whey protein (R1.5, R2.8, and R3.9). Yogurts were pumped through a smoothing pilot system comprising a plate heat exchanger set at 15, 20, or 25 degrees C and then stored at 4 degrees C until analysis (d 1, 9, and 23). Yogurt particle size and firmness were measured. Yogurt syneresis and water mobility were determined, respectively, by centrifugation and time domain low-frequency proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-LF-NMR). Increasing the smoothing temperature increased gel firmness and microgel (dense protein aggregates) sizes independently of the whey protein content. Also, yogurt microgel sizes changed with storage time, but the evolution pattern depended on protein ratio. Yogurt R1.5 showed the largest particles, and their sizes increased with storage, whereas R2.8 and R3.9 had smaller microgels, and R3.9 did not show any increase in microgel size during storage. Micrographs showed a heterogeneous gel with the empty area occupied by serum for R1.5, whereas R2.8 and R3.9 showed fewer serum zones and a more disrupted gel embedding microgels. Induced syneresis reduced with greater whey protein content and time of storage. This is in agreement with 1H-LF-NMR showing less bulk water mobility with increasing whey protein content during storage. However, 1H-LF-RMN revealed higher values of spontaneous serum separation during storage for R1.5 and R3.9 yogurts, whereas these were lower and stable for R2.8 yogurt. Microgels play an important structural role in yogurt textural attributes, and their characteristics are modulated by whey protein content and smoothing temperature. Optimization of these parameters may help improve nonfat stirred dairy gel.

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