Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5541042 | International Dairy Journal | 2017 | 36 Pages |
Abstract
Hexanal formation and pentanal formation were found to be early signs of quality deterioration of both a high lipid infant formula milk powder and a high protein infant formula milk powder with similar lactose and water content; these aldehydes were sensitive predictors for shelf-life at ambient conditions using short term storage at temperatures up to 55 °C. Higher temperature loads such as 70 °C were found to induce rapid lactose crystallisation entailing a rising water activity, higher levels of free radicals, rapid browning and formation of Strecker aldehydes from protein degradation, of which all were found to be unsuitable for shelf-life prediction. Advanced glycation end products were not detected during storage at 25 °C for up to 18 weeks and the rate of oxygen consumption for the reconstituted milk drink was not affected by storage of the infant formulas at 25 °C; neither can be recommended for shelf-life prediction.
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Authors
Hong Cheng, Ru-Gang Zhu, Henriette Erichsen, John Soerensen, Mikael Agerlin Petersen, Leif H. Skibsted,