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Flavour development in dairy cream using fish digestive lipases from Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchustshawytscha) and New Zealand hoki (Macruronusnovaezealandiae)
Authors:Ivan Kurtovic  Susan N. Marshall  Matthew R. Miller  Xin Zhao
Affiliation:1. Department of Animal Science, McGill University (Macdonald Campus), 21,111 Lakeshore Road, Ste. Anne de Bellevue (QC), Canada H9X 3V9;2. The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Limited, P.O. Box 5114, Port Nelson, Nelson, New Zealand
Abstract:Digestive lipases from Chinook salmon and New Zealand hoki were evaluated as flavour modifying agents in dairy products. Cream was incubated either with fish lipase or commercially available lipases used in dairy flavour development – calf pregastric esterase (Renco™ PGE) and microbial lipase (Palatase® 20,000 L). The fish enzymes were more similar to calf PGE in terms of the total amount and types of fatty acids released over the course of the reaction. Like the pregastric esterase, the fish enzymes released mainly short chain fatty acids. The highest specificity was towards the key dairy product flavour and odour compounds, butanoic and hexanoic acids. The odour intensity of hexanoic acid produced by the salmon lipase, as measured by SPME–GC–MS, was similar to that produced by both Palatase® and PGE. Free fatty acid composition, together with sensory characteristics of lipase-treated creams, demonstrated the potential for flavour enhancement in dairy products using fish lipases.
Keywords:Chinook salmon   Cream   Hoki   Lipase   Short chain fatty acid
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