Study on acrylamide accumulation in the model system based on animal raw materials depending on thermal treatment regimes
Journal: Food systems (Vol.2, No. 1)Publication Date: 2019-03-30
Authors : A. S. Dydykin O. K. Derevitskaya A. N. Ivankin A. V. Kulikovskii E. I. Dragunskaya;
Page : 4-8
Keywords : acrylamide; model meat composition; amino acid composition; aspartic acid; reducing sugars; thermal treatment;
Abstract
The aim of the investigation was to study an effect of thermal treatment parameters on the content of reducing sugars, amino acids and acrylamide in the meat model system depending on the thermal treatment regime. The authors studied an influence of the reaction of melanoidine formation on the concentration of amino acids and reducing sugars at different thermal treatment regimes and established a decrease in the total amino acid content by 7 % upon the standard sterilization regime and by 11 % when increasing the temperature or duration of thermal treatment. It was found that at the same temperature with an increase in duration of thermal treatment up to 50 min., the acrylamide level increased by 1.6 times. Exposure of the model samples to a temperature of 120 °С for 50 min. had the highest effect on the level of acrylamide accumulation compared to the traditional sterilization regime of canned foods for child nutrition and the regime with an increased temperature of up to 130 °С. The obtained data will allow developing new meat products with the reduced content of unsafe components for nutrition in early childhood.
Other Latest Articles
- HYDROPONIC FODDER PRODUCTION: AN ALTERNATIVE TECHNOLOGY FOR SUSTAINABLE LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION IN INDIA
- RICH WITH RUPEES OR RICH IN GOOD GUT MICROBIOTA: WHAT IS MORE IMPORTANT FOR OUR METABOLIC HEALTH?
- Thawing process calculation of egg ingredients particles in minced meat
- Detection of soybean by real-time PCR in the samples subjected to deep technological processing
- Products of chemical reactions that occur during high-temperature heat treatment of the meat products
Last modified: 2020-01-05 19:24:32