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1.
Food Res Int ; 182: 114150, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38519179

ABSTRACT

Apple pomace powder is a sustainable food ingredient, but its more complex composition compared to commonly purified ingredients could curb its valorization. This study assesses how physicochemical properties, formulation and process factors influence the physical properties of the emulsion. The two main objectives were to: 1) unravel the structuring and stabilizing mechanisms of such complex systems and 2) account for interactions between various parameters instead of studying them separately. Thirty-one experimental samples were formulated to produce a variety of microstructures with droplet diameters ranging from 28 to 105 µm, textures with viscosity ranging from 135 to 2,490 mPa.s at 50 s-1 and stabilities. Using multicriteria selection of effects revealed that the concentration of the powder and the size of solid particles are the main levers for tailoring the structure-function relationships of the emulsions. Solid particles play a key role in both structuring and stabilizing the emulsions. Process parameters have an impact on the emulsification step by modifying the adsorption rate of solid particles. In conclusion, modelling advanced our understanding of stabilizing mechanisms of the emulsions produced by apple pomace and will enable efficient knowledge transfer for industrial applications.


Subject(s)
Food , Emulsions/chemistry , Powders , Adsorption
2.
Food Chem ; 386: 132653, 2022 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35349901

ABSTRACT

This study aimed to evaluate the applicability of purified pea ingredients (starch and protein isolate) by assessing their potential to form volatile compounds during the different steps of sponge cake development compared to pea flour and wheat flour. While pea flour was highly susceptible to lipid oxidation during batter beating, the combination of purified pea starch and pea protein yielded significantly fewer oxidation markers with known green-beany off-odors. This was due more to the inactivation of lipoxygenase during flour fractionation than to differences in batter structure. However, fractionated ingredients were highly prone to participating in the Maillard reaction and caramelization during baking, leading to a more complex mixture of pyrazines, Strecker aldehydes and furanic compounds with potential malty and roasted notes compared to cakes based on pea flour or wheat flour. These findings confirm that using purified pea fractions can create high-quality products with an attractive composition.


Subject(s)
Flour , Volatile Organic Compounds , Flour/analysis , Odorants , Pisum sativum , Starch , Triticum/chemistry , Volatile Organic Compounds/chemistry
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