86 research outputs found

    The Umami Taste of Edible and Medicinal Mushrooms

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    Nonvolatile Taste Components of Three Strains of Agrocybe cylindracea

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    Effect of γ-Irradiation on Flavor Compounds of Fresh Mushrooms

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    Quality of Bread Supplemented with Antrodia salmonea-Fermented Grains

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    Fermented grains of buckwheat, oat, embryo rice and wheat, which were prepared by solid-state fermentation with Antrodia salmonea, and the mycelium was used to substitute 7 % of wheat flour to make bread. No difference in proximate composition, texture profile and contents of non-volatile taste components was observed among bread samples. White bread and bread supplemented with mycelium and fermented grains looked different. Bread supplemented with fermented grains had similar thermal properties, which differed from those of white bread and bread supplemented with mycelium. Bread supplemented with fermented grains contained substantial mass fractions (on dry mass basis) of adenosine (0.92–1.96 μg/g), ergosterol (24.53–30.12 μg/g), ergothioneine (2.16–3.18 μg/g) and γ-aminobutyric acid (2.20–2.45 μg/g). In addition, bread supplemented with mycelium contained lovastatin (0.43 μg/g). White bread and bread supplemented with fermented grains had similar sensory results. Overall, fermented grains could be incorporated into bread to provide beneficial effects

    Antioxidant properties of several specialty mushrooms

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    Four specialty mushrooms are commercially available in Taiwan, including Dictyophora indusiata (basket stinkhorn), Grifola frondosa (maitake), Hericium erinaceus (lion's mane), and Tricholoma giganteum (white matsutake). Methanolic extracts were prepared from these specialty mushrooms and their antioxidant properties were studied. The antioxidant activities at 1.2 mg ml−1 were in the order of basket stinkhorn>lion's mane>maitake>white matsutake. Basket stinkhorn showed an excellent reducing power of 1.09 at 3 mg ml−1. At 6.4 mg ml−1, scavenging effects on 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl radicals were 92.1% for basket stinkhorn and 63.2–67.8% for other specialty mushrooms. At 40 mg ml−1, scavenging effects were 75.0 and 69.4% for basket stinkhorn and lion's mane and 39.6 and 47.4% for maitake and white matsutake, respectively. At 24 mg ml−1, chelating effects on ferrous ions were 91.9% for basket stinkhorn and 46.4–52.0% for other specialty mushrooms. Total polyphenols were the major naturally occurring antioxidant components found in the methanolic extracts from these specialty mushrooms
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