Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7590830 Food Chemistry 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
In unheated soymilk, extrinsic proteins are bound to intact oil bodies coated by one monolayer of phospholipids and oil body intrinsic oleosins. In this study, effects of heating (70-100 °C; 0-30 min) on particle size and bound proteins of oil bodies were examined in suspension (oil bodies from unheated soymilk into deionized water) and soymilk. Mass ratio of extrinsic proteins/oleosins of oil bodies in unheated suspension and soymilk was respectively 1.1 and 2.5. By heating, extrinsic proteins released from oil bodies with different rates, and Z-average size of oil bodies increased in the beginning; afterwards, residual extrinsic proteins (extrinsic proteins/oleosins: 0.31 in suspension and 0.74 in soymilk; 100 °C, 4 min) and Z-average size were affected little. The amount of residual proteins at 80-100 °C was negatively correlated with Z-average size of oil bodies in suspension (R2 = 0.996) and soymilk (R2 = 0.890).
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
Authors
, , , , ,