Dairy (Nov 2023)

High Protein—Low Viscosity? How to Tailor Rheological Properties of Fermented Concentrated Milk Products

  • Nico Piskors,
  • Anisa Heck,
  • Jessica M. Filla,
  • Zeynep Atamer,
  • Jörg Hinrichs

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/dairy4040041
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4
pp. 594 – 605

Abstract

Read online

The rheological properties, e.g., viscosity and yield stress, of fermented concentrated milk products (protein content > 8%) are strongly dependent on their volume fraction. Post-treatment with high-power ultrasound can reduce the volume fraction of these products and, hence, lead to reduced crowding effects and thus lower viscosities and yield stress. Besides that, the particle size distribution (span) should stay unaltered. Increasing the energy input during the sonication of fat-free fresh cheese with a protein content of 8.9 ± 0.4% decreased the volume fraction below the limit for concentrated products (ϕ = 0.4), while the particle size also decreased. This led to a narrowed span and, hence, the viscosity should have increased; however, the results showed that viscosity and yield stress were decreasing. Consequently, the influence of the span was neglectable for concentrated fermented milk products with volume fractions below the concentrated area. Furthermore, the sonicated samples showed no syneresis over a storage time of two weeks. The sonicated samples reached similar rheological properties to commercial stirred yogurt, which demonstrated the suitability of high-power ultrasound as a post-treatment to tailor the rheological properties of high-protein fermented milk products.

Keywords