Foaming properties of barley protein isolates and hydrolysates
✍ Scribed by Erkan Yalçın; Süeda Çelik; Esra İbanoğlu
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 469 KB
- Volume
- 226
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0044-3026
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Table 1 Influence of acetylation degree on gelling properties of solutions of broad bean protein isolates Product Gel firmness Short characterization of the gel WaI Unmodified protein isolate 0.9 No gel, viscous pulp Acetylated protein isolate; acetylation degree z 68% 7.4 Soft gel, brittle structur
A protein-enriched by-product derived from the Bioraf oil extraction procedure applied to rapeseed has been enzymatically hydrolyzed by Alcalase and subsequently acylated using C 6 -C 16 acyl chlorides to generate modified hydrolysates with good foaming properties. The resulting peptides had an aver
## Abstract Although hydrolysed albumin and hydrolysed hordein derived from barley are independently capable of stabilising foams in model beer solutions, when both are present together, the net foam stability is less than anticipated. In particular, it seems that hordein, even in an unhydrolysed s
Foaming properties of oilseed proteins are important for the domestic market to be used in the preparation of various food products. Whole rapeseed had the highest foam capacity followed by soybean, sunflower, safflower, glandless cottonseed, peanut and finally sesame. The extraction of lipids from