Litcius/Paper detail

Elevated levels of branched chain fatty acids in low‐salt fish sauce by co‐fermentation: flavor improvement and metabolism analysis

Yue Zhou, Junxiao Wu, Abdul Razak Monto, Li Yuan, Ruichang Gao

2024Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture16 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Traditional fish sauce products rely on relatively long fermentation time and high salt concentration, resulting in inconsistent quality and health risks. Branched-chain fatty acids (BCFAs) are associated with nutritional benefits and health-care effects, mainly derived from food fermentation. This study aimed to screen BCFAs-producing bacteria with high protease and aminotransferase activity as starter cultures for fish sauce fermentation. RESULTS: The low-salt fish sauce products were obtained by co-fermentation with three chosen strains. Trichloroacetic acid (TCA)-soluble peptides and amino acid nitrogen concentrations were higher in the co-fermentation group (FH group). The organoleptic evaluation showed co-fermentation optimized flavor composition and endured with rich taste. The levels of BCFAs and branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) significantly increased by co-fermentation. Volatile metabolomics analysis indicated that BCFAs, branched-chain esters, and pyrazines were the key flavor compounds in the co-fermented group. CONCLUSION: The co-fermentation system with selected strains to ferment low-salt fish sauce has the potential to increase BCFA content and improve flavor and nutrition. © 2024 Society of Chemical Industry.

Topics & Concepts

FermentationFood scienceFlavorChemistryFermented fishTasteFermentation in food processingLactic acidUmamiFatty acidOrganolepticProteaseBacteriaBiochemistryBiologyEnzymeGeneticsPolyamine Metabolism and ApplicationsFermentation and Sensory AnalysisMeat and Animal Product Quality