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Freeze-dried, oven-dried, and microencapsulation of essential oil from Allium sativum as potential preservative agents of minced meat

Authors :
Raja Chekki
Walid Elfalleh
Sana Jaballah
Nabiha Bouzouita
Hajer Tlili
Hanen Najjaa
Source :
Food Science & Nutrition, 8(4):1995-2003, Food Science & Nutrition, Vol 8, Iss 4, Pp 1995-2003 (2020), Food Science & Nutrition
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The present study was conducted to compare the antibacterial activity of oven‐dried and freeze‐dried Allium sativum along with its spray‐dried microencapsulated essential oil in the preservation of minced beef meat. Allium sativum extracts were tested against mesophilic aerobic microorganisms, coagulase‐positive staphylococci, Escherichia coli, Salmonella sp., and the sulfite‐reducing anaerobes. A difference between the chemical compositions of powders obtained by the conventional oven‐drying and freeze‐drying has been verified by HPLC‐MS2, freeze‐dried fresh garlic powder contains 74% of allicin, and 12% cysteine sulfoxides comparing to the oven‐drying garlic powder in which is detected two thiosulfinate isomers: allicin (67%) and allyl‐1‐propenyl thiosulfinate (21%). CIELAB color analysis was performed to assess the effect of drying temperature on powders. The microflora‐inhibiting effect of freeze‐dried fresh garlic and the spray‐dried microencapsulated essential oil at a concentration of 20% represents a promising way to be used in food systems such as meat and meat products preservation, at 4–8°C.<br />The microflora‐inhibiting effect of freeze‐dried fresh garlic and the spray‐dried microencapsulated essential oil at a concentration of 20% represents a promising way to be used in meat preservation, at 4–8°C.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Food Science & Nutrition, 8(4):1995-2003, Food Science & Nutrition, Vol 8, Iss 4, Pp 1995-2003 (2020), Food Science & Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8202d16e7f09e93fcf9105f31f2d15a2