Cohesiveness and flowability of particulated food systems is of particular interest in the oral processing and swallowing of food products, especially for people suffering from dysphagia. Although cohesiveness of a bolus is an essential parameter in swallowing, a robust technique for objective measurement of cohesiveness of particulated semi- or soft-solids is still lacking. In our approach the ring shear tester is used to measure the cohesiveness and flowability of a model particulated food system based on fresh green pea powders and pastes with controlled moisture content. The focus is on how the cohesiveness and flowability of dry pea particles change as they absorb moisture, swell and soften, while continuously agglomerating until a paste like bolus is achieved. Differently hydrated pea powders start to granulate with increasing moisture content resulting in decreasing flowability and increasing cohesiveness until a critical moisture content of approximately 73 wt% is reached. Above the critical moisture content, cohesiveness starts to decrease and flowability increases, i.e. indicating the transition into the rheological domain of concentrated suspension flow. Besides moisture content we also show that water adsorption capacity i.e. hydration properties and resulting degree of particle softness tremendously influences the flowability factor and cohesiveness of powder systems. Thus ring shear tester can be used to provide guidelines for food paste formulation with controlled cohesiveness.
The enzyme laccase is a copper-containing oxidoreductase with the ability to oxidize a wide range of substrates, such as ferulic acid. Thus, the ferulic acid-containing sugar beet pectin (SBP) can be crosslinked through laccase-mediated oxidation. As cross-linking increases viscosity, it could be applied to stabilize SBP-containing foams. In this study, laccase-mediated cross-linking of SBP was investigated under conditions of a high-pressure foaming process. Shear, presence of CO 2 , and pressure were simulated in a rheometer equipped with a high-pressure cell. At rest, addition of laccase to SBP solution led to the formation of a stiff gel. Application of shear upon mixing of laccase and SBP solution decreased the storage modulus with increasing shear duration and shear rate. This can be attributed to the formation of a fluid gel. However, when shear was stopped before all available ferulic acid groups were cross-linked, a stronger and more coherent network was formed. Pressure exerted by CO 2 did not affect cross-linking.Additionally, this approach was tested in a stirred high-pressure vessel where SBP was foamed through CO 2 dissolution under pressure and shear followed by controlled pressure release. While pure SBP foam was highly unstable, addition of laccase decelerated collapse. Highest stability was reached when laccase and SBP were mixed prior to depressurization. At the point of foam formation, the continuous phase was thereby viscous enough to increase foam stability. At the same time, continuation of cross-linking at rest caused gel templating of the foam structure.
An open-porous protein sponge with mixed wettability is presented made entirely from whey proteins and with promising applications in biomedicine, pharmaceutical, and food industry. The fabrication relies on an additive-free, clean and scalable process consisting of foaming followed by controlled microwave-convection drying. Volumetric heating throughout the matrix induced by microwaves causes fast expansion and elongation of the foam bubbles, retards crust formation and promotes early protein denaturation. These effects counteract collapse and shrinkage typically encountered in convection drying of foams. The interplay of high protein content, tailored gas incorporation and controlled drying result in a dried structure with dual-scale porosity composed of open macroscopic elongated foam bubbles and microscopic pores in the surrounding solid lamellae induced by water evaporation. Due to the insolubility and mixed wettability of the denatured protein network, polar and non-polar liquids are rapidly absorbed into the interconnected capillary system of the sponge without disintegrating. While non-watery liquids penetrate the pores by capillary suction, water diffuses also into the stiff protein matrix, inducing swelling and softening. Consequently, the water-filled soft sponge can be emptied by compression and re-absorbs any wetting liquid into the free capillary space.
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