Chemical composition and physical properties of 20% milk fat reformulated creams manufactured from reduced cholesterol butteroil

<p>A reduced cholesterol butteroil was emulsified into skim milk, buttermilk, or buttermilk/butter-derived aqueous phase using different homogenization pressures and heat treatments to produce a 20% milk fat cream with a reduced cholesterol content. Transmission electron microscopic examinatio...

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Main Author: Elling, Jodi L.
Other Authors: Food Science and Technology
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
fat
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/41749
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03242009-040416/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-417492021-05-26T05:48:32Z Chemical composition and physical properties of 20% milk fat reformulated creams manufactured from reduced cholesterol butteroil Elling, Jodi L. Food Science and Technology Duncan, Susan E. Keenan, Thomas W. Eigel, William N. III fat butteroil LD5655.V855 1995.E455 <p>A reduced cholesterol butteroil was emulsified into skim milk, buttermilk, or buttermilk/butter-derived aqueous phase using different homogenization pressures and heat treatments to produce a 20% milk fat cream with a reduced cholesterol content. Transmission electron microscopic examination of reformulated cream emulsions showed an oil-in-water emulsion typical of milk lipid globules found in natural homogenized cream. Heat treatment (pasteurized and unpasteurized) and homogenization pressure (1500/500 PSI and 2000/500 PSI) had no effect on cream composition except for the significant effect of homogenization pressure on cholesterol content and the amount of phospholipid associated with the lipid globules. The formulations using buttermilk or buttermilk and butter-derived aqueous phase were the most similar in the amount of protein and phospholipid associated with the lipid globules when compared to a natural homogenized cream.</p> <p> The viscosity. interfacial area of lipid globules. creaming stability, and feathering stability of the three formulations and a control at the two homogenization pressures were measured over a two week storage period at 7°C. The apparent viscosity and interfacial area of the different creams varied significantly with fomulation but not with homogenization pressure or length of storage time (p ⠤ 0.05). Creaming stability was significantly affected by formulation, homogenization pressure, and length of storage tinle (p S ⠤.05). Feathering appeared to be unaffected by any of the treatment factors.</p> <p>The reformulated cream using buttermilk and butter-derived aqueous phase was the closest in comparison to a natural homogenized crealn in chelllical composition and physical properties. The ability to elnulsify the reduced cholesterol butteroil into a stable cream emulsion may allow for the use of reduced cholesterol butteroil in fluid dairy products, ice crealn, and cheese. Development of any full-fat product with a reduced cholesterol content will require a reformulation step until a method for cholesterol removal directly from fluid milk or cream is developed.</p> Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:32:11Z 2014-03-14T21:32:11Z 1995-05-23 2009-03-24 2009-03-24 2009-03-24 Thesis Text etd-03242009-040416 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/41749 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03242009-040416/ en OCLC# 34360155 LD5655.V855_1995.E455.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xv, 139 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic fat
butteroil
LD5655.V855 1995.E455
spellingShingle fat
butteroil
LD5655.V855 1995.E455
Elling, Jodi L.
Chemical composition and physical properties of 20% milk fat reformulated creams manufactured from reduced cholesterol butteroil
description <p>A reduced cholesterol butteroil was emulsified into skim milk, buttermilk, or buttermilk/butter-derived aqueous phase using different homogenization pressures and heat treatments to produce a 20% milk fat cream with a reduced cholesterol content. Transmission electron microscopic examination of reformulated cream emulsions showed an oil-in-water emulsion typical of milk lipid globules found in natural homogenized cream. Heat treatment (pasteurized and unpasteurized) and homogenization pressure (1500/500 PSI and 2000/500 PSI) had no effect on cream composition except for the significant effect of homogenization pressure on cholesterol content and the amount of phospholipid associated with the lipid globules. The formulations using buttermilk or buttermilk and butter-derived aqueous phase were the most similar in the amount of protein and phospholipid associated with the lipid globules when compared to a natural homogenized cream.</p> <p> The viscosity. interfacial area of lipid globules. creaming stability, and feathering stability of the three formulations and a control at the two homogenization pressures were measured over a two week storage period at 7°C. The apparent viscosity and interfacial area of the different creams varied significantly with fomulation but not with homogenization pressure or length of storage time (p ⠤ 0.05). Creaming stability was significantly affected by formulation, homogenization pressure, and length of storage tinle (p S ⠤.05). Feathering appeared to be unaffected by any of the treatment factors.</p> <p>The reformulated cream using buttermilk and butter-derived aqueous phase was the closest in comparison to a natural homogenized crealn in chelllical composition and physical properties. The ability to elnulsify the reduced cholesterol butteroil into a stable cream emulsion may allow for the use of reduced cholesterol butteroil in fluid dairy products, ice crealn, and cheese. Development of any full-fat product with a reduced cholesterol content will require a reformulation step until a method for cholesterol removal directly from fluid milk or cream is developed.</p> === Master of Science
author2 Food Science and Technology
author_facet Food Science and Technology
Elling, Jodi L.
author Elling, Jodi L.
author_sort Elling, Jodi L.
title Chemical composition and physical properties of 20% milk fat reformulated creams manufactured from reduced cholesterol butteroil
title_short Chemical composition and physical properties of 20% milk fat reformulated creams manufactured from reduced cholesterol butteroil
title_full Chemical composition and physical properties of 20% milk fat reformulated creams manufactured from reduced cholesterol butteroil
title_fullStr Chemical composition and physical properties of 20% milk fat reformulated creams manufactured from reduced cholesterol butteroil
title_full_unstemmed Chemical composition and physical properties of 20% milk fat reformulated creams manufactured from reduced cholesterol butteroil
title_sort chemical composition and physical properties of 20% milk fat reformulated creams manufactured from reduced cholesterol butteroil
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/41749
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03242009-040416/
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