open access publication

Article, 2024

Heat-induced gels from pea protein soluble colloidal aggregates: Effect of calcium addition or pH adjustment on gelation behavior and rheological properties

Food Hydrocolloids, ISSN 0268-005X, 1873-7137, Volume 147, Page 109417, 10.1016/j.foodhyd.2023.109417

Contributors

Ren, Wenbo 0000-0003-4962-7093 [1] Xia, Wenjie 0000-0002-7800-5616 [1] Gunes, Deniz Zeynel 0000-0002-4372-8224 (Corresponding author) [2] Ahrné, Lilia Maria 0000-0003-4360-8684 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen
  2. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] KU Leuven
  4. [NORA names: Belgium; Europe, EU; OECD]

Abstract

Heat-induced protein gels are appreciated due to their texture in a variety of food products. To support the shift to more sustainable protein consumption more knowledge is needed about plant protein gelation behavior and rheological properties of gels. In this study, the effect of calcium concentration (10 mM–100 mM) and pH (5.9–6.8) on heat-induced gelation behavior of 10 w/w% pea protein water-soluble extract separated from a commercial pea protein isolate (WSE-PPI) were for the first time investigated and compared. The rheological results show Gʹ values of around 3000 Pa for gels containing 20 mM calcium, and then a decrease in Gʹ by a factor ∼1.3 when the calcium concentration increased to 100 mM, whereas a continuous increase in gel strength was observed with the pH decrease of WSE-PPI dispersions. By comparison of calcium-addition and pH-adjusted heat-induced gels at the same pH, it was found that at low calcium concentrations (≤20 mM), the calcium-assisted gels exhibited higher gel strength. Contrariwise, at high calcium concentrations (≥50 mM), the pH-adjusted gels have higher gel stiffness and larger deformability before rupture. CLSM results verified this finding and show that the gel structure of pH-adjusted gels are more homogenous, containing significantly more compact structure. Overall, our findings show a systematic link between microstructure and rheological properties of heat-induced gels, which can be controlled by the calcium addition and pH adjustment. These results provide valuable information for the modulation, design, and customization of plant derived protein gels for specific food applications.

Keywords

CLSM, CLSM results, G′, addition, adjustment, aggregation, applications, behavior, calcium, calcium addition, calcium concentration, colloidal aggregates, commercial pea protein isolate, compact structure, comparison, concentration, customers, decrease, deformation, design, dispersion, effect, effect of calcium addition, effect of calcium concentration, extraction, factors, findings, food, food applications, food products, g-values, gel, gel stiffness, gel strength, gel structure, gelation, gelation behavior, heat-induced gels, heat-induced protein gels, increase, information, isolates, knowledge, large deformation, links, low calcium concentrations, modulation, pH, pH adjustment, pH decrease, pea, pea protein isolate, plants, production, properties, properties of gels, properties of heat-induced gels, protein, protein gels, protein isolate, results, rheological properties, rheological properties of gels, rheological properties of heat-induced gels, rheological results, rupture, shift, stiffness, strength, structure, study, systematic link, texture, values, w/w%, water-soluble extract

Funders

  • China Scholarship Council

Data Provider: Digital Science