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Acid Gelation Properties of Camel Milk—Effect of Gelatin and Processing Conditions

Thao M. Ho, Jiadi Zhao, Nidhi Bansal

2022Food and Bioprocess Technology13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This study investigated the effects of glucono-delta-lactone (GDL) concentrations (0.8–1.2%, w/w), gelatin content (0.6–1.0%, w/w) and processing conditions on the properties of camel milk acid gels. Although the pH of camel milk reduced to 4.3 within 4 h of acidification at 1.0% GDL, it was unable to form a suitable gel for a yoghurt-like product unless gelatin was added. At 0.8% gelatin, camel milk gels had similar hardness, lower viscosity and rheological strength, and higher water holding capacity as compared to cow milk gels. Heating of camel milk (85 °C/15–20 min), 2-stage homogenization (150/50 bar) or their combination did not significantly affect the water holding capacity, hardness, viscosity, rheological strength and microstructure of camel milk gels. These processing conditions did not affect protein integrity as confirmed by sodium dodecyl-sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) analysis.

Topics & Concepts

GelatinRheologyChemistryFood scienceWater holding capacityHomogenization (climate)ViscosityApparent viscosityChromatographyMaterials scienceBiochemistryComposite materialBiodiversityBiologyEcologyAnimal Diversity and Health StudiesProteins in Food SystemsMeat and Animal Product Quality
Acid Gelation Properties of Camel Milk—Effect of Gelatin and Processing Conditions | Litcius