Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8979314 | International Dairy Journal | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The oxidative stability of an algal oil emulsion dispersed in water, or fluid milk of varying fat contents, was assessed from measurements of lipid hydroperoxide and propanal concentration. All of the milk samples, independent of their milk fat content, were stable compared to the aqueous samples. The extent of oxidation was unaffected when sodium azide (200Â ppm) was added to inhibit microbial growth. Added iron (100Â ppm) accelerated the oxidation rate in the aqueous samples, but had no effect on the milk samples. The antioxidant properties of milk were ascribed to the iron binding of casein. Added protein antioxidants (0.8Â wt%) [i.e. sodium caseinate, whey protein isolate (WPI) and thermally denatured WPI] had minimal effects whereas EDTA and ascorbic acid (160Â ppm) were effective antioxidants.
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Authors
J.J. Gallaher, R. Hollender, D.G. Peterson, R.F. Roberts, J.N. Coupland,