Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

HHP treatment of liquid egg at 200-350 MPa

2017; IOP Publishing; Volume: 950; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1088/1742-6596/950/4/042008

ISSN

1742-6596

Autores

Adrienn Tóth, Cs. Németh, Péter Palotás, József Surányi, Ildikó Csilla Nyulas-Zeke, Barbara Csehi, Lorenzo Álvarez del Castillo, László Friedrich, Cs. Balla,

Tópico(s)

Meat and Animal Product Quality

Resumo

High hydrostatic pressure (HHP) treatment of egg proteins partially limits their sensitivity to pressure. According to the literature, at the 450 MPa level, denaturation of some proteins sets in to the extent that sensory and functional characteristics are impacted. This study involved treating liquid egg (egg white, yolk, and melange) at less than the above-mentioned value, after which the microbiological effect was examined. For the study, pressure pouches were filled with 100ml of raw liquid egg per pouch. Then the samples were treated at 200, 250, 300 and 350 MPa. In each case, the level was reached by increasing pressure at a rate of 100 MPa/min. Measurements were taken at the Corvinus University of Budapest, Faculty of Food Science, Dept. of Refrigeration and Livestock Products Technology RESATO FPU 100-2000 equipment. Denaturation was determined with calorimetric (DSC) tests. From our results, it appears that even at 250 MPa pressure treatment, the viable cell count decreases. Further, it can be said that microbe count went down in the egg white samples at 300-350 MPa, below the impact level. Significant denaturation was not detected during our examinations. In summary, we state that the most HHP-sensitive liquid egg type, egg white, can be pressure treated to reduce microbe count at a level less than that which causes denaturation. Microbe reduction was smaller in yolk and melange, so higher pressure values are appropriate for these products.

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