A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

The role of oxygen in the liquid fermentation of wheat bran




AuthorsSavolainen OI, Coda R, Suomi K, Katina K, Juvonen R, Hanhineva K, Poutanen K

Publication year2014

JournalFood Chemistry

Journal name in sourceFood chemistry

Journal acronymFood Chem

Volume153

First page 424

Last page31

Number of pages8

ISSN0308-8146

eISSN1873-7072

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2013.12.062


Abstract
The extensive use of wheat bran as a food ingredient is limited due to its bitter taste and hard texture. To overcome these, some preprocessing methods, such as fermentation with yeast and lactic acid bacteria or enzymatic treatments have been proposed. The current work studied microbial communities, acidification, ethanol formation and metabolite profile of wheat bran fermented in either aerated or anaerobic conditions. In aerated conditions, yeasts grew better and the production of organic acids was smaller, and hence pH was higher. In anaerobic conditions, lactic acid bacteria and endogenous heterotrophic bacteria grew better. Aeration had a large effect on the sourdough metabolite profile, as analyzed by UPLC-qTOF-MS. Anaerobic conditions induced degradation of ferulic and caffeic acids, whereas the amount of sinapic acid increased. Aeration caused degradation of amino acids and hydroxycinnamic acid derivatives of polyamines. The results suggest that the control of oxygen could be used for tailoring the properties of bran sourdough.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:57