Litcius/Paper detail

Impact of temperature and water activity on the aroma composition and flavor stability of pea ( <i>Pisum sativum</i> ) protein isolates during storage

Hannah Mehle, Laurianne Paravisini, Devin G. Peterson

2020Food & Function32 citationsDOI

Abstract

Flavor stability of pea protein isolates (PPIs) during storage was investigated. Two commercial PPIs were stored at three water activities (0.128-0.501) under refrigerated (7 °C) and accelerated (37 °C) temperatures for 12 weeks. Eleven aroma compounds were monitored by gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (GC/MS/MS) and results revealed significant changes in the aroma concentrations among the PPI samples during storage. In agreement with the chemical changes, significant differences in orthonasal aroma profiles were demonstrated using a sensory difference-from-control test. The sample stored under accelerated storage temperature (37 °C) and at the highest water activity showed the greatest degree of aroma change. An aroma recombination sensory study indicated the generation of two specific compounds, 1-octen-3-ol and nonanal, along with the degradation of 2-4-decadienal resulted in sensory changes during storage indicating lipid oxidation was the main mechanism of flavor instability in the PPI samples.

Topics & Concepts

SativumPisumAromaFlavorFood sciencePea proteinComposition (language)Water activityChemistryCold storageFood storageBiologyBotanyHorticultureWater contentEngineeringPhilosophyGeotechnical engineeringLinguisticsProteins in Food SystemsGABA and Rice ResearchFood composition and properties