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Understanding the Performance of Plant Protein Concentrates as Partial Meat Substitutes in Hybrid Meat Emulsions

Hybrid meat products are an excellent strategy to incorporate plant proteins into traditional meat formulations considering recent market trends focusing on the partial reduction in red meat content. In this work, we evaluated the effects of different concentrated plant proteins (soy, pea, fava bean...

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Autores principales: dos Santos, Mirian, da Rocha, Daniela Almeida Vieira Fogaça, Bernardinelli, Oigres Daniel, Oliveira Júnior, Fernando Divino, de Sousa, Diógenes Gomes, Sabadini, Edvaldo, da Cunha, Rosiane Lopes, Trindade, Marco Antonio, Pollonio, Marise Aparecida Rodrigues
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9657839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36359925
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11213311
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author dos Santos, Mirian
da Rocha, Daniela Almeida Vieira Fogaça
Bernardinelli, Oigres Daniel
Oliveira Júnior, Fernando Divino
de Sousa, Diógenes Gomes
Sabadini, Edvaldo
da Cunha, Rosiane Lopes
Trindade, Marco Antonio
Pollonio, Marise Aparecida Rodrigues
author_facet dos Santos, Mirian
da Rocha, Daniela Almeida Vieira Fogaça
Bernardinelli, Oigres Daniel
Oliveira Júnior, Fernando Divino
de Sousa, Diógenes Gomes
Sabadini, Edvaldo
da Cunha, Rosiane Lopes
Trindade, Marco Antonio
Pollonio, Marise Aparecida Rodrigues
author_sort dos Santos, Mirian
collection PubMed
description Hybrid meat products are an excellent strategy to incorporate plant proteins into traditional meat formulations considering recent market trends focusing on the partial reduction in red meat content. In this work, we evaluated the effects of different concentrated plant proteins (soy, pea, fava bean, rice, and sunflower) in partially replacing meat in meat emulsion model systems. Soy, pea, and sunflower proteins showed great compatibility with the meat matrix, giving excellent emulsion stability and a cohesive protein network with good fat distribution. Otherwise, adding rice and fava bean proteins resulted in poor emulsion stability. Color parameters were affected by the intrinsic color of plant proteins and due to the reduction in myoglobin content. Both viscoelastic moduli, G′ and G″ decreased with the incorporation of plant proteins, especially for rice and fava bean. The temperature sweep showed that myosin denaturation was the dominant effect on the G′ increase. The water mobility was affected by plant proteins and the proportion between immobilized and intermyofibrillar water was quite different among treatments, especially those with fava bean and rice proteins. In vitro protein digestibility was lower for hybrid meat emulsion elaborated with rice protein. It is concluded that soy, pea, and mainly sunflower proteins have suitable compatibility with the meat matrix in emulsified products.
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spelling pubmed-96578392022-11-15 Understanding the Performance of Plant Protein Concentrates as Partial Meat Substitutes in Hybrid Meat Emulsions dos Santos, Mirian da Rocha, Daniela Almeida Vieira Fogaça Bernardinelli, Oigres Daniel Oliveira Júnior, Fernando Divino de Sousa, Diógenes Gomes Sabadini, Edvaldo da Cunha, Rosiane Lopes Trindade, Marco Antonio Pollonio, Marise Aparecida Rodrigues Foods Article Hybrid meat products are an excellent strategy to incorporate plant proteins into traditional meat formulations considering recent market trends focusing on the partial reduction in red meat content. In this work, we evaluated the effects of different concentrated plant proteins (soy, pea, fava bean, rice, and sunflower) in partially replacing meat in meat emulsion model systems. Soy, pea, and sunflower proteins showed great compatibility with the meat matrix, giving excellent emulsion stability and a cohesive protein network with good fat distribution. Otherwise, adding rice and fava bean proteins resulted in poor emulsion stability. Color parameters were affected by the intrinsic color of plant proteins and due to the reduction in myoglobin content. Both viscoelastic moduli, G′ and G″ decreased with the incorporation of plant proteins, especially for rice and fava bean. The temperature sweep showed that myosin denaturation was the dominant effect on the G′ increase. The water mobility was affected by plant proteins and the proportion between immobilized and intermyofibrillar water was quite different among treatments, especially those with fava bean and rice proteins. In vitro protein digestibility was lower for hybrid meat emulsion elaborated with rice protein. It is concluded that soy, pea, and mainly sunflower proteins have suitable compatibility with the meat matrix in emulsified products. MDPI 2022-10-22 /pmc/articles/PMC9657839/ /pubmed/36359925 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11213311 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
dos Santos, Mirian
da Rocha, Daniela Almeida Vieira Fogaça
Bernardinelli, Oigres Daniel
Oliveira Júnior, Fernando Divino
de Sousa, Diógenes Gomes
Sabadini, Edvaldo
da Cunha, Rosiane Lopes
Trindade, Marco Antonio
Pollonio, Marise Aparecida Rodrigues
Understanding the Performance of Plant Protein Concentrates as Partial Meat Substitutes in Hybrid Meat Emulsions
title Understanding the Performance of Plant Protein Concentrates as Partial Meat Substitutes in Hybrid Meat Emulsions
title_full Understanding the Performance of Plant Protein Concentrates as Partial Meat Substitutes in Hybrid Meat Emulsions
title_fullStr Understanding the Performance of Plant Protein Concentrates as Partial Meat Substitutes in Hybrid Meat Emulsions
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the Performance of Plant Protein Concentrates as Partial Meat Substitutes in Hybrid Meat Emulsions
title_short Understanding the Performance of Plant Protein Concentrates as Partial Meat Substitutes in Hybrid Meat Emulsions
title_sort understanding the performance of plant protein concentrates as partial meat substitutes in hybrid meat emulsions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9657839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36359925
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11213311
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