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FermentationPreservation Lucy Allan Delaney Ryan Abbi Radous 2015 What is Fermentation? An enzymatically controlled change in a food product brought on by the action of microorganisms. -manufacturers add microbes to cause fermentation -what it does: changes the chemical environment of a food *promotes the growth of bacteria, yeasts, and mold -Types of fermentation a. alcoholic b. bacterial c. mold d. two-step Fermentation Process Video… https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tp-oQUJEIzM (0:00-4:20) Back to the types of fermentation… Alcoholic: Yeast Bread Yeast uses oxygen Oxygen is used up CO2 is produced Small air sacs in the dough bread rises Alcohol evaporates Formula: Pyruvic acid + NADH alcohol + CO2 + NAD+ Types of fermentation (continued)… Bacterial “Lactic Acid Fermentation” refers to the fact that the major by-product is lactic acid Where it occurs Muscle cells: O2 is needed to produce ATP. During intense exercise, the body produces a large amount of lactic acid because the body doesn’t have enough oxygen. Yogurt Formula: Pyruvic acid + NADH lactic acid + NAD+ Types of fermentation (continued…) Mold Creates a wide range of by-products Antibiotics Flavor compounds Enzymes Examples: soy sauce, and tempeh (Asian soybean cake) Types of fermentation (continued…) Two-step fermentation May require different types of microbes Types: Lactic Acid plus other microbes Cheese Sourdough bread Acetic Acid Fermentation Vinegar red wine vinegar Cacao beans chocolate Candied citron fruitcake So, which types of foods does fermentation impact? Yogurt Cheese Wine Cider Bread Sauerkraut Flavorings Candy Fruit juice Silage Beer So does it impact non-food items? Answer: Yes Antibiotics Laundry detergent Insulin Growth hormone Cellulose Monoclonal antibodies Compost Sno-max Ice-minus Medicine to dissolve tumors Medicine to clot blood Why do we need fermentation? Increase shelf life of foods Improve dough handling characteristics of bread Enhance the texture, flavor and odor of foods Safely store food Creates a variety of flavors, textures, colors and appearances New energy sources Increased vitamin content Improved digestibility Decreased toxicity Decreased ailments Are there any disadvantages of fermentation? Answer: Yes. The product may become unfit for consumption Acid and gas Unfavorable conditions for microorganisms Can other factors impact fermentation? Answer: Yes. Fermentation time pH levels of 4.0-8.5 Carbonic acid Calcium carbonate Presence of air Temperature Salts Water Concentration of sugar Contaminating organisms A cheesy video… https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y9wLhRrj5Ug Labs that we’ll be doing… Yogurt Lab (2/25-2/27) Root Beer Lab (2/27) Yogurt Production COMPOSITION OF YOGURT What Is Yogurt? • A fermented dairy product whereby milk is inoculated with bacteria cultures • Fermentation - a slow decomposition process of organic substances induced by microoroganisms or enzymes Producing Yogurt • Lactose (compound sugar found in milk shown as lactin or milk sugar) is fermented by two differen species of bacterai: Lactobacillus and Streptococcus • Commercially produced by adding milk to 2-4% nonfat dry milk powder that has been inoculated with a 5% combinatin of Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus(1:1 ratio) • Milk mixture is then indubated at 45oC/113oF foor 3-6 hours. Product must be chilled immediately. Composition of Yogurt • Product of fermentation • food fermentation - study of microbial activity usually anaerobic, on suitable substrates under controlled or uncontrolled conditions • Lactose is fermented • Lactic acid - end product of anaerobic metabolism of glucose provides tart flavor of yogurt, as well as the formation of a gel structure • Major flavor components - carbonyl compounds - acetaldehyde is most important and gives yogurt is green apple or nutty flavor Yogurt Composition Etc. • Quality is based on color, appearance, body, texture, flavor • Ropy (slime-producing) lactic acid bacteria produce polysaccharides that are released into yogurts where they increase viscosity and improve water retention • Milk SNf (solids-not-fat) cotent varies 9-16% • can be increased by adding milk powder • increased levels needed to increase protein content, helps to increase viscosity to desired levels Role of Bacteria in Yogurt Production • Lactic acid bacteria produce polysaccharides that increase viscosity and water retention • High moisturer content 85% • Reaches desired acidity (ph of 4.25-4.5), bacterial fermentation is stopped by cooling yogurt • Cooled yogurt should have between 0.9% and 1.2% lactic acid Sour Taste in Yogurt • Enzymes released by bacteria convert lactose into lactic acid • Acis have sour taste, yogurts is a sour tasting dairy product • Some yogurt contains live bacteria and others have been fermented but pasteurized, heated to kill microorganisms, after fermentation Gel Texture of Yogurt • Milk proteins curdle • Each milk gel consists of protein matrix, which is modified by lactic acid to produce smooth yogurt product • Heating milk cases casein micelles to interconnect to form a gel matrix - destroyes undesirable microorganisms • Lactic acid bacteria produces polysaccharides that decrease "flowability" Root Beer Experiment History Made by soaking Sassafras root in water, and adding sugar in yeast Early 1900s, scientists discovered that safrole, chemical in Sassafras root, was a carcinogen Background 2 respiration types: aerobic and anaerobic Yeast cells obtain energy from glucose through fermentation Alcoholic Fermentation Begins after glucose diffuses into the yeast cell. Glucose is broken down into ATP for yeast cell. 2 3-carbon molecules called pyruvate are made.. Yeats cell converts pyruvate into CO2 and ethanol. Equation for anaerobic alcohol fermentation: C6H12O6 2C3H4O3 (pyruvate) + 4H+ 2CO2 + 2CH3CH2OH (ethanol) First 2 days – yeast will use aerobic respiration to grow/reproduce Oxygen supply is depleted, yeast cells shift to anaerobic respiration to obtain energy Supplies root beer with carbon dioxide (“fizz”) and gives it a unique flavor due to small amount of ethanol produced Fermentation in Food Products Beer, wine, bread, cheese, sauerkraut, baked goods Carbon dioxide in root beer gives it it’s “fizz” Fizz produced artificially in store bought root beer, without aid of yeast cells