Food Science & Nutrition (Jan 2024)

Quality specification of ice creams produced with different homofermentative lactic acid bacteria

  • Gökhan Akarca,
  • Mehmet Kilinç,
  • Ayşe Janseli Denizkara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.3762
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 192 – 203

Abstract

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Abstract This study investigated the changes in the physicochemical, microbiological, textural, and nutritional values of ice cream produced by various methods with the addition of different lactic acid bacteria. Adding lactic acid bacteria to the ice cream mix caused a decrease in firmness, consistency, cohesiveness, index of viscosity, pH, aw, first drop, complete melting, and overrun values (p .05). The L* values of the samples varied between 88.91 and 83.36, a* values between 0.76 and 1.32, and b* values between 6.57 and 8.38. An increase was detected in the amount of organic acid (excluding formic acid) in the samples produced with the addition of different lactic acid bacteria (p < .05). The number of fatty acids in the samples varied depending on the lactic acid addition and the production method; the rate of this change was generally higher in the samples with added lactic acid bacteria after mix maturation (p < .05). In particular, the amounts of short‐ and medium‐chain fatty acids increased in the samples with lactic acid bacteria added after mix ripening, compared to the control sample.

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