Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5541136 | International Dairy Journal | 2017 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Casein-based food structures (58% moisture, 33% protein, 4% fat) with different calcium levels (37-1080 mg 100 gâ1) were manufactured by heating at 80 °C under shear. At intermediate calcium levels (358-673 mg 100 gâ1), homogeneous structures were formed without chelating salts (CS) after relatively short processing times. However, homogeneous structures with high (â¥775 mg 100 gâ1) or low (â¤37 mg 100 gâ1) calcium levels could not be produced without CS. On cooling, the CS-free matrices with intermediate calcium levels formed functional cheese-like structures, although with lower hardness, flow on melting and Gâ² values at 25 °C than conventionally formulated high-calcium structures made from rennet casein with CS. By reducing total calcium level, it is possible to produce hydrated, functional casein-based structures containing lipid without CS. Omitting CS provides potential to reduce the sodium content of processed cheese type-products by up to 60% and would allow clean label products.
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Authors
Irene McIntyre, Michael O'Sullivan, Dolores O'Riordan,