Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2435846 International Dairy Journal 2006 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The counts of total aerobic mesophilic bacteria, lactic acid bacteria (in three different culture media, M17 agar, MSE agar, and Rogosa agar) and yeasts, and some biochemical parameters (levels of lactose, glucose, galactose, L(+)- and D(−)-lactic acids, ethanol, titratable acidity and pH) were determined during 196 h of fermentation in five batches of Kefir made from cows’ milk using a commercial starter culture. Lactococcus spp. predominated during the first 48 h of fermentation (∼8 log10 cfu g−1); Lactobacillus spp. became the predominant species after 48 h (∼8.5 log10 cfu g−1). During the first 24 h of fermentation, the lactose content decreased from a mean value of 4.92% (w/w) to 4.02% (w/w); the concentration of L(+)-lactic acid increased from 0.01% to 0.76% (w/w) and the pH decreased to 4.24 over the same period. After 24 h of fermentation, the changes in the levels of lactose and L(+)-lactic acid, and in pH, occurred more slowly. Neither glucose nor galactose were detected during fermentation. The production of ethanol was limited, reaching a mean final value of 0.018% (w/w).

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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