pH-induced changes in casein micelles during direct acidification and bacterial fermentation of reconstituted skim milk at 20ЊC were monitored by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) in combination with biochemical and rheological methods. For SEM casein micelle observations, an original method of milk sample preparation with porous inorganic membranes was developed. Micrographs suggested that different stages of micellar association were related to pH and that between pH 5.5 and 5.0 casein micelles coalesced. Correlations between microstructural and biochemical changes in casein micelles, and rheological behavior of milk or gel, help to explain the different steps leading to the final protein network of the acid milk gel.
Reconstituted skim milk with varying concentrations of total solids was coagulated using glucono‐δ‐lactone (GDL). Microscopic, turbidimetric and rheological procedures were used to examine mineral solubilization, buffering capacity, casein dissociation and micellar solvation during gelation. Total solids of the milk affected pH of the onset of gelation attributable to differences in colloïdal calcium phosphate in the casein particles during acidification. Firmness and elasticity of the resulting gel increased with total solids from a more direct contribution of dry matter during the last stage of acid milk gel formation.
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