Title of article :
The relationship between rheological parameters and whey separation in milk gels
Author/Authors :
John A. Lucey، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages :
6
From page :
603
To page :
608
Abstract :
The relation between whey separation of rennet-induced gels and rheological properties of those gels is reasonably well understood. A low fracture stress and a high value for the loss tangent at low frequencies have been correlated with a tendency to exhibit syneresis in rennet gels. In contrast, little is known about the relationship between mechanical properties of gels and whey separation in acid-induced milk gels, such as yoghurt, although this continues to be a major defect. In recent work, it has been found that conditions such as high milk heat treatment, fast rates of acidification and high incubation temperatures all gave high levels of whey separation compared with gels made from unheated milk that were incubated at low temperatures and where the rate of acidification was slow (i.e. when bacterial cultures were used instead of the acidogen, glucono-δ-lactone). The tendency to exhibit whey separation in acid gels made from heated milk was related to a low fracture strain and an increase in the loss tangent (observed even at high frequencies) during the gelation process (a high value indicates conditions favouring relaxation of bonds). Excessive rearrangements of particles in the gel network before and during gelation were implicated as being responsible for whey separation and rheological conditions that appeared to indicate this defect are described. It was also concluded that techniques that measure the spontaneous formation of surface whey should be distinguished from those that measure the expression of whey from networks under pressure as the latter tests only measure gel rigidity.
Keywords :
Whey separation , Loss tangent , Acid gels , Fracture strain , Rheology , Yogurt , Syneresis
Journal title :
Food Hydrocolloids
Serial Year :
2001
Journal title :
Food Hydrocolloids
Record number :
977988
Link To Document :
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