Data in Brief (Feb 2018)

Data on volatile compounds in fermented materials used for salmon fish sauce production

  • Mitsutoshi Nakano,
  • Yoshimasa Sagane,
  • Ryosuke Koizumi,
  • Yozo Nakazawa,
  • Masao Yamazaki,
  • Toshihiro Watanabe,
  • Katsumi Takano,
  • Hiroaki Sato

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16
pp. 154 – 156

Abstract

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This article describes the analysis of volatile compounds in fermented materials used for salmon fish sauce production via gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). Ten types of fish sauces were produced from raw salmon materials, including various proportions of flesh, viscera, inedible portion (heads, fins, and backbones), and soft roe, by mixing them with salt and allowing them to ferment for up to three months. The volatile compounds were captured by a solid-phase microextraction method and then applied to GC/MS for separation and identification of the compounds in the fish sauce products. The number of volatile compounds identified in the starting materials varied from 15 to 29 depending on the ingredients. The number of compounds in the final fish sauce products was reduced by 3.4–94.7% of that in the original material. The retention times and names of the identified compounds, as well as their relative peak areas, are provided in a Microsoft Excel Worksheet. Keywords: Fish sauce, Volatile compound, Flavor, GC/MS