4.7 Article

Effect of coagulation temperature on cooking integrity of heat and acid-induced milk gels

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FOOD RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL
卷 169, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2023.112846

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Heat and acid-induced milk gels; Coagulation; Acidified milk; Cooking integrity; Calcium; LF-NMR

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The stability and structure retention ability of milk gels during cooking can be enhanced through acidification treatment.
Heat and acid-induced milk gels do not melt or flow upon heating and thus show great potential as a dairy-based protein source for cooking, e.g. for stews. Understanding how processing, e.g. acidification, affects the cooking behavior of these gels is therefore of great industrial interest. The cooking integrity of gels produced by rapidly acidifying milk using citric acid at temperatures of 60, 75, and 90 degrees C, was determined by analyzing composition, texture, and spatial water distribution before and after cooking. Increasing the acidification temperature from 60 to75 degrees C resulted in a significant reduction of yield, due to decreased moisture content of the gels. With increasing content of solids, the gels grew harder and denser, as observed by texture profile analysis and low-field Nuclear Magnetic Resonance. Upon cooking the 60 degrees C gel lost a significant amount of moisture, due to the contraction of the porous protein network. The more compact gels, prepared at 75 and 90 degrees C, did not lose mass indicating good cooking integrity, i.e. a gel that keeps its structure during cooking. Acidification temperature thus greatly influenced cooking integrity. The effect was mainly ascribed to the density of the gel texture, a result of the speed of protein aggregation and calcium recovery.

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