Czech Journal of Food Sciences (Jun 2015)

Saccharomyces cerevisiae and kefir production using waste pomegranate juice, molasses, and whey

  • Chryssa Nouska,
  • Ioanna Mantzourani,
  • Athanasios Alexopoulos,
  • Eugenia Bezirtzoglou,
  • Argyro Bekatorou,
  • Konstantoula Akrida-Demertzi,
  • Panagiotis Demertzis,
  • Stavros Plessas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17221/351/2014-CJFS
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33, no. 3
pp. 277 – 282

Abstract

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The growth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker's yeast) and kefir was studied in substrates containing pomegranate juice, molasses, and cheese whey, at various conditions such as fermentation temperature, air supply, initial sugar concentration, and substrate composition. The results showed that, in the case of kefir, the highest production yield of biomass (0.24 g/g of utilised sugar) and productivity (6.5 g/l/day) was obtained in 40/60 and 20/80% of pomegranate/cheese whey. S. cerevisiae grew easily on all substrates with higher cell mass yields (0.34 g/g) and productivities (13.1 g/l/day) compared to kefir, with the best results obtained at the ratio of 40/60 and 20/80% of pomegranate/molasses. These results are promising regarding the exploitation of non-conventional substrates, such as the juice from discarded pomegranate fruits of a currently significantly increasing market, for microbial biomass production.

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