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Change in texture improvement of low-fat tofu by means of low-fat soymilk protein denaturation

Authors
Shin, Woo-kyoungYokoyama, Wallace H.Kim, WookWicker, LouiseKim, Yookyung
Issue Date
30-Mar-2015
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
low-fat tofu; low-fat soymilk; stepwise denaturation; gelling
Citation
JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE, v.95, no.5, pp.1000 - 1007
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE
Volume
95
Number
5
Start Page
1000
End Page
1007
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/94081
DOI
10.1002/jsfa.6780
ISSN
0022-5142
Abstract
BACKGROUNDTofu made from low-fat soy flour is a nutritional food for consumers and economically benefits the food processor. However, low-fat tofu has poor textural quality, especially insufficient firmness. Stepwise heating (heating at 75 degrees C, followed by holding at 95 degrees C) of full-fat soymilk increases gel properties. Therefore we evaluated the two-step heating of low-fat soymilk to improve tofu texture. RESULTSThe denaturation enthalpy and temperature of -conglycinin and glycinin were higher in low-fat tofu compared to high-fat tofu. The viscosity of low-fat soymilk and texture of tofu by one-step heating were weaker than full-fat soymilk and tofu. However, the two-step heating increased free sulfhydryl groups and viscosity of low-fat soymilk to a value higher or similar to conventional soymilk. The syneresis of low-fat tofu was reduced about 30% and hardness was higher (131.0 N) by the two-step process compared to one-step heating of full-fat tofu (101.4 N) by the one-step process. The microstructure of low-fat tofu became finer, denser and more homogeneous by the two-step heat process. CONCLUSIONLow-fat tofu produced by denaturing the two major soy proteins separately had improved textural qualities similar to full-fat tofu as a result of increased hydrophobic interactions between denatured protein molecules. (c) 2014 Society of Chemical Industry
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