1 / 12

Vegetable Fermentation (II)

Vegetable Fermentation (II). Key points for vegetable fermentation. Benefits Enhanced preservation Desirable flavor and texture property Antimicrobial activity High conc. of thiocyanates and other sulfur-containing comp. Nutritional property

iain
Download Presentation

Vegetable Fermentation (II)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Vegetable Fermentation (II)

  2. Key points for vegetable fermentation • Benefits • Enhanced preservation • Desirable flavor and texture property • Antimicrobial activity • High conc. of thiocyanates and other sulfur-containing comp. • Nutritional property • Sauerkraut has anti-scurvy properties (high vitamin C) • Koreans consume ~43Kg per year (120 g/day) of kimchi

  3. Key points for vegetable fermentation • Natural fermentation • No heat process to inactive other flora • Natural lactic acid bacteria to carry out fermentation • LAB minor population, but dominant in successful product fermentation • Succession: the fermentation depends not on any single organism, but a consortium of bacteria representing several different genera and species. A given organism (or group of organisms) initiates growth and becomes established for a period of time. Due to accumulation of inhibitory compounds, growth slows down and gives way to other species that are less sensitive to those factors. (Fig. 7.3) • Bacteriophage may also have a role

  4. Sauerkraut • Leuconostoc mesenteroides • Has relatively short lag phase and high growth rate at low temp (15-18C) • Heterofermentative pathway (lactic acid, acidic acid, CO2, ethanol) • Acidic environment (0.6%-0.8%, as lactic acid) inhibit non-lactic competitor and favors other LAB • Acid approaches 1.0%, inhibit L. mensenteroides (4-6 days) • Other homolactic bacteria • Acidity 1.6%, pH below 4.0, only L. plantarum can grow • Final acidity 1.7%, pH 3.4-3.6 (Fig 7-2)

  5. Kimchi • Most popular of all fermented foods • More than 100 varieties with various raw materials and processes • 360 million Kg produced annually, 100 grams daily consumption, 12% of the total food intake • Multiple ingredients, flavor and texture properties • Nutrition • Vitamin C, B, calcium, iron, potassium, dietary fiber, antioxidants, live microflora • Functional food • Producing antimicrobial compounds

  6. Pickle Production • Any vegetable or fruit preserved by salt or acid • Most important: cucumber • 1 billion Kg in the US used for pickles (half of the crop) • Now more than half of the pickles are not fermented (direct add acetic acid) • Types • Fresh-packed (non-fermented) • Refrigerated (non-fermented) • Fermented (processed) • Distinctive flavor and texture

  7. Manufacture of fermented pickles • Rely on salt, oxygen exclusion, anaerobiosis to select for growth of • instead of dry salt • Salt conc. higher than that for sauerkraut • Less diverse microflora • Brine at least 5% salt, some 7%-8%, up to 12% • Up to 2 months, end pH ~3.5, acidity 0.6%-1.2% (as lactic) • L. mensenteroides cannot grow • Initiated by L. plantarum and Pediococcus sp. • Brine condition inhibitory to coliforms and other non-LAB • De-salted after fermentation for further consumption • Can use starters (controlled fermentation) (Fig 7-5)

  8. Defects • Pickles • Bloaters and floaters (Table 7-4) • Excessive gas pressure, internal cavity formation • LAB (heterolactic, malolactic fermentation), coliforms, yeasts • Control: remove dissolved CO2 by flushing or purging with nitrogen gas • Some can still be used • Destruction and softening • Slippery, loses crispness and crunch • Cannot be used • Pectinolytic enzymes by microorganisms • Fungi • Penicillium, fusarium, Alternaria, Aschyta, Cladosporium • Control: acidity

  9. Olives • 90% of the world production used to make olive oil • Only 7%-10% consumes as table olives • From middle East • Italy, Spain, Greece, Turkey: 75% of worldwide production, US less than 1%, but 90%-95% from California used to make table olives • More than 70% on the US market are brined and canned (California-style olives)

  10. Composition • Phenol and polyphenol compounds common to olives • Color, antimicrobial activity • Antioxidant • oleuropein • Bitter flavor • Glucosidic phenols and oleropein

  11. Fermented olives • Spanish-style (green Spanish-style) • Treated with sodium hydroxide (lye) and fermented (natural microflora) • Greek-style (natually black, ripe-style) • Not treated with lye, but fermented (natural microflora) • Ripe black- or green-style • Lye-treated, not fermented • Going through a special aeration treatment, promote oxidation of pigments and conversion of green to black (California-style)

More Related