Title of article
Influence of adding Sea Spaghetti seaweed and replacing the animal fat with olive oil or a konjac gel on pork meat batter gelation. Potential protein/alginate association
Author/Authors
Fernلndez-Martيn، نويسنده , , F. and Lَpez-Lَpez، نويسنده , , I. and Cofrades، نويسنده , , S. and Colmenero، نويسنده , , F. Jiménez، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
9
From page
209
To page
217
Abstract
Standard and modulated differential scanning calorimetry (DSC, MDSC) and dynamic rheological thermal analysis (DRTA) were used to in situ simulate the batter gelation process. Texture profile analysis (TPA) and conventional quality evaluations were applied to processed products. Sea Spaghetti seaweed addition was highly effective at reinforcing water/oil retention capacity, hardness and elastic modulus in all formulations. Olive oil substituting half pork fat yielded a presumably healthier product with slightly better characteristics than control. A konjac-starch mixed gel replacing 70% of pork fat produced a similar product to control but with nearly 10% more water. DSC revealed the currently unknown phenomenon that Sea Spaghetti alginates apparently prevented thermal denaturation of a considerable protein fraction. MDSC confirmed that this mainly concerned non-reversing effects, and displayed glass transition temperatures in the range of 55–65 °C. DRTA and TPA indicated however much stronger alginate-type gels. It is tentatively postulated that salt-soluble proteins associate athermally with seaweed alginates on heating to constitute a separate phase in a thermal composite-gelling process.
Keywords
pork meat , Sea Spaghetti seaweed , Protein/alginate association , olive oil , DSC , Glass transition , Mixed gelation , DRTA , TPA , Konjac gel , MDSC
Journal title
Meat Science
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Meat Science
Record number
1489054
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