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Yeast Extracts: Nutritional and Flavoring Food Ingredients

期刊

ACS FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
卷 1, 期 4, 页码 487-494

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsfoodscitech.0c00131

关键词

yeast; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; nutritional ingredients; flavoring agents; protein; amino acid; glutamate

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Yeast extracts are concentrates of soluble yeast fractions, particularly Saccharomyces cerevisiae. They are described for their nutritional composition and flavoring properties, providing diverse flavors such as meaty, kokumi, umami, and salty taste. They are a source of amino acids and can induce umami taste, similar to monosodium glutamate, at lower concentrations in foods.
Yeast extracts are the concentrates of the soluble fraction of yeast and more particularly Saccharomyces cerevisiae. As food ingredients, yeast extracts are described for their nutritional composition and flavoring properties. They are produced principally from autolysis, but in some cases, acid or exogenous enzyme preparations are added. The main nutritional components of yeast extracts include partly hydrolyzed protein with 35-40% of free amino acid, and they also contain B vitamins and some trace elements. As flavoring ingredients in foods, they provide diverse flavors depending on the methods used for their production. These flavors include meaty, kokumi, umami, and salty taste along with taste masking properties. Yeast extracts are a source of amino acids, including glutamic acid, with a content of about 5% and 10% w/w free and total glutamate, respectively. Yeast extracts have the capacity to induce the umami taste, the flavoring effect of monosodium glutamate (MSG), when providing glutamate at an amount below 1% in foods, i.e., below the amount required for pure MSG. The latest studies indicate that they can also be used as sources of bioactive substances in functional foodstuffs and dietary supplements.

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