Journal of Chemistry (Jan 2020)

Effect of Spray-Drying and Freeze-Drying on the Properties of Soybean Hydrolysates

  • Huan Wang,
  • Xiaohong Tong,
  • Yue Yuan,
  • Xinhui Peng,
  • Qiaozhi Zhang,
  • Shuang Zhang,
  • Changyuan Xie,
  • Xiaoying Zhang,
  • Shizhang Yan,
  • Jingwen Xu,
  • Lianzhou Jiang,
  • Baokun Qi,
  • Yang Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/9201457
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2020

Abstract

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The use of enzyme-assisted aqueous extraction to extract soybean oil will produce soy protein hydrolysates (SPH) that have good antioxidant properties but are bitter and hygroscopic. To microencapsulate these hydrolysates, soy protein isolate/maltodextrin mixtures were used as the carrier. The effects of spray-drying and freeze-drying on the bitterness, hygroscopicity, and antioxidant properties were compared. The properties of different dried samples were compared using solubility, hygroscopicity, moisture content, water activity, flowability, and glass transition temperature (Tg). The results showed that the spray-drying was more effective than freeze-drying. Hygroscopicity was reduced to 18.2 g/100 g, and the Tg value was raised to 80.8°C. The morphology was analyzed using scanning electron microscopy, and the antioxidant properties of the samples were measured using the ABTS˙+ radical scavenging activity. The results showed that spray-dried SPH had more carrier masking, which weakened bitterness, reduced moisture absorption, and had no significant negative impact on its oxidation resistance, solubility, and flowability, and spray-drying after carrier encapsulation of SPH improved the recovery rate.