food chemistry by dr boominathan ph.d. m.sc.,(med. bio, jipmer), m.sc.,(fgswi, israel), ph.d (nus,...

Post on 25-Dec-2015

222 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

FOOD CHEMISTRY

BYDR BOOMINATHAN Ph.D.

M.Sc.,(Med. Bio, JIPMER), M.Sc.,(FGSWI, Israel), Ph.D (NUS, SINGAPORE)PONDICHERRY UNIVERSITY

Fifth lecture13/August/2012

Goals

• Structural arrangements of different Gums:• Carrageenans, • Guar gum,• Carbogum,• Xanthan, • and Gum arabic • Composition• Physico-chemical properties of Gums• Applications of Gums in food industry

March 5, 2004. Southern Bio-products Conference

Polysaccharides

Carrageenans

Ionic Gums

Carrageenan

• Carrageenan – obtained by extraction with

water or alkaline water of certain Rhodo phyceae (red seaweed).

• It is a hydrocolloid– consisting mainly of the

potassium, sodium, magnesium, and calcium sulfate esters of galactose and 3.6-anhydro-galactose copolymers.

– nonhomogeneous polysaccharides

3 types: Kappa, lambda, iota

Three types of Carrageenans

Carrageenans

• Kappa

• Lambda

Structural changes of Carrageenans at different temperatures

Hot

In a hot solution, the polymer molecules are in a coiled state. As the solution is cooled, they intertwine in double-helical structures.

As the solution is cooled further, the double helices are believed to nest together with the aid of potassium or calcium ions.

Cold

coiled state double-helical structures

Ca 2+

double helices are believed to nest

Cold

Gelation

Comparisons of different Carrageenans

• Characteristics Kappa Iota Lambda • • Solubility • 20° C water no no yes • 80° C milk yes yes yes • 20° C milk no no thickens • Gelation• With addition of: K+ Ca++ None • Stability • Freeze – thaw no yes yes • pH > 5 stable stable stable • Syneresis yes no no • Salt tolerance poor good good

Protein - Carrageenan Interactions

• Protein (milk) with a negative charge

Protein (milk) with a positive charge

• Reacts with casein milk protein

•The thickening effect of kappa-carrageenans in milk is 5–10 times greater than it is in water.

•Useful in the preparation of chocolate milk, icecream, evoporated milk etc.

Carrageenan: Application of carrageenan in meat protection

• 3 categories of meat:1. pale, soft, and exudative (PSE)

• Due to postmortem generation of lactic acid

2. dark, firm, and dry or non-exudative (DFD)3. "normal" meat

• acceptable • subjectively between PSE meat and DFD meat

• Function: Carrageenan + soy protein: – Prevents occurrence of PSE meat

Concept: Use of carrageenan is to hold water and maintain water content, and thereforesoftness of meat products, such as sausages, during the cooking.

Carrageenan softens meats• Carrageenan is a water-soluble polymer, also known

as a gum, that is used as a fat substitute in processed meats and can be found in condensed milk and some soy milk products.

• Normally, fat serves the purpose of maintaining softness, but because of the binding power of carrageenan for protein and its high affinity for water,

• Carrageenans can be used to replace in part this function of natural animal fat in lean products.

March 5, 2004.

… However • Carrageenan may cause stomach

lesions, cancer• Strawberry cheesecake like this may be

stabilized and thickened with carrageenan.

• Containers of pudding, ice cream, yogurt, or cottage cheese may include the ingredient carrageenan, a thickener derived from red seaweed.

• For decades, it has been presumed to be safe to eat, but new research from a medical doctor on the faculty of the University of Iowa shows that presumption may be wrong.

Typical Dairy Applications of Carrageenan

• Typical Dairy Applications of Carrageenan

• Milk Gels • Cooked flans (open pastry filled with fruit or custard) or custards

(Sweetened mixture of milk and eggs baked, boiled or frozen)– Gelation K, K + I

• Cooked prepared custards – Thickening – Gelation K, I, L

• Pudding & Pie Fillings • Dry mix cooked with milk

– Level starch gelatinization• Ready-to-eat

– Syneresis control, bodying

Typical Dairy Applications of Carrageenan

• Whipped products– Whipped cream Stabilize overrun– Aerosol whipped cream

• Stabilize overrun & emulsion

• Cold prepared Milks – Instant Breakfast

• Suspension, bodying agent

– Shakes• Suspension, bodying

Carrageenan: Summary

• Structure: • Galactose backbone• Ester sulfate gives negative charge• Properties: • Gels with potassium (Kappa)• Gels with calcium (Iota)• Non-gelling (Lambda)• Applications: • Good stabilizer for milk proteins• Suspender for chocolate in milk• Part of ice cream stabilizer mix• Water gels

Questions• Commercial carragennan contains: 1. Kappa 2. Iota 3. Lamda 4. a mixture of above• The viscosity of carrageen is quite stable over a wide

range of pH values because• 1. sulfate half-ester groups are always ionized• 2. Phosphate groups are never ionized• 3. Phosphate groups are always ionized• 4. Nitro groups are always ionized

Questions• Lambda carragennan contains: 1. the maximum no. of sulfates 2. the lowest no. of sulfates 3. only one sulfate 4. none• Carrageen softens meat due to its• 1. binding power for protein • 2. high affinity for water• 3. both

Non-ionic Gums

•Guar gum &

Carobgum

•Guar gum

Guar Gum

Guar gum is the ground endosperm of seeds

Guar gum

Monomer: galactose, mannose (galactomannan)Bonding: -1,6/-1,4

MannoseGalactose

Glucose

Guar gum

Monomer: galactose, mannose (galactomannan)Bonding: -1,6/-1,4 a main chain of b-D-mannopyranosyl units joined by (1-- 4) bonds with single-unit a-D-galactopyranosyl branches attached at O-6

Mannose Mannose

Galactose

Guar Gum• It produces the highest viscosity of any natural, commercial gum

• Galactomannan (Mannose (1-4) + Galactose (1-6) every other Mannose

• Galactomannans consist of MW 220,000 ± 20,000

• Particle size affects viscosity and hydration

• Cold water swelling - Turbid solutions

Guar Gum• Hydration increased by heating

• High water binding

• High viscosity form - up to 100,000 CP

• Low viscosity from - up to 10,000 CP

• Modifies properties when used with:– Carrageenan

– Xanthan

Guar Gum

• Characteristic of different grades of Guar Gum•

• Grade Cold Viscosity. Hydration Rate Dispersability

• Coarse 2,700 Slow Excellent

• Medium 3,800 Moderate Excellent

• Fine 4,000 Fast Fair

• Powder 4,300 V. Fast Poor

Food Uses

Ice cream prevents ice crystal formation, slows meltdown, improves heat shock resistance

Salad dressing viscosity

Cheese improves spreading

Guar gum uses in food industry

• Ice creams: Smooth creamy texture

• Bakery products: Texture, moisture retention

• Noodles: Moisture retention, machine runnability

• Beverages: mouth feel

• Meat: Binder, absorb water

• Dressings: Thickener, emulsion stabilizer

Carobgum

30

Carobgum is the ground endosperm of seeds

Carobgum

March 5, 2004. Southern Bio-products Conference

Carobgum • Carobgum

– obtained from the endosperm of the Carob or locust seed (Ceratonia siliqua).

Monomer: galactose, mannose (galactomannan)Bonding: -1,4/-1,6 (branch)

Seed Gum

Carobgum

Carob Gum

Galactomannan (D-Mannose (1-4) with Galactose (1-6) every 4th mannose

Mannose

Galactose

Carobgum• Galactomannan (D-Mannose (1-4) with Galactose (1-6) every 4th mannose

• Molecular weight 330,000 ±30,000

• Neutral - relatively unaffected by ions, pH.

• Not soluble in cold water

• Fully hydrated if heated 10 minutes at 80° C

• Solutions are turbid, off-white

• Modify properties of

– Carrageenan

– Xanthan Gum

March 5, 2004. Southern Bio-products Conference

Carobgum

• retards ice crystal growth • shows viscosity synergy with xanthan.

Guar gum and Carobgum

Gums-Guar gum and Carobgum

37

B) Non-ionic gums• Guar gum and Carobgum

– No effect of pH and ions (salts) since they are uncharged

– Guar gum has galactose side-groups on every other mannose unit (2 monnose:1 galactose) while carobgum does not have uniform distribution (4 mannose:1galactose) or irregular

Carbogum

Gums-Guar gum and Carobgum

39

B) Non-ionic gums• Guar gum and Carobgum:

– Guar gum : soluble in hot/cold water; very viscous solutions at 1% ; and it forms gels and films at 2-3%

• Guar gum produces the highest viscosity of any natural, commercial gum

• Used in Ground meats, salad dressings and sauces……

– Carobgum: Soluble at 80/90oC; very viscous solutions; Synergises with xanthan gum or carrageenan

• Used as a Binder in meat products and in frozen desserts

Gums-Guar gum and Carobgum

Questions

Guar gum and carbogum are examples for: 1. Ionic gums 2. Non-ionic gums 3. Both 4. None

pH and ions can change the property of Guar gum and carbogum

1.True2.False3.Only pH4.Only ions

top related