97 research outputs found

    Effects of Species, Post-Harvest Treatment, and Roasting on Fibre, Volatile Compounds, and Polyphenol Contents in Coffee Silverskin

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    Although coffee silverskin (CS) has recently been used as a food ingredient, no knowledge has been reported on the effects of species or different post-harvest treatments on its chemical composition. Therefore, the fibre, volatile compounds, phenolic acid content, and antioxidant capacity of CS samples obtained at three roasting intensities (light, medium, and dark) from the Coffea arabica and C. canephora species, each subjected to a washing or a sun-drying (“natural”) post-harvest treatment, were studied. Obtained results showed that the chemical composition of CS is due to species, roasting, post-harvest treatment, and interaction. In particular, natural Arabica CS showed the highest content of volatile compounds of Maillard and varietal origin, whereas washed Arabica CS showed the highest content of soluble dietary fibre and chlorogenic derivatives. Pyrroles, sulphur compounds, and pyridines contents were higher in Canephora CS than in Arabica CS. The dark-roasted washed Arabica CS showed the highest content of 5-O- and 3-O-caffeoylquinic acids, while the natural Arabica CS highlighted the highest antioxidant capacity. The effect of post-harvest treatments seemed to be emphasised in Arabica CS, independent of roasting, which did not significantly affect the antioxidant capacity of CS from either species

    Assessment of lactic acid bacteria sensitivity to terpenoids with the Biolog methodology

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    International audienceTerpenoids are plant metabolites which can be found in traces in the milk of animals fed with fresh forages. To these compounds, many biological properties, including antimicrobial activity, have been recognized. However, no information about the sensitivity of lactic acid bacteria (naturally occurring in milk and dairy products) to terpenoids are currently available. The Biolog methodology, which is traditionally used for the metabolic characterization of microorganisms, has also been found suitable for the evaluation of the activity exerted by plant components against bacterial consortia, allowing to establish the duration of antimicrobial activity (if present) and its resulting effect on microorganisms viability. In the present work, this approach was employed to study the effect of six oxygenated terpenoids (geraniol, linalool, alpha-terpineol, terpinen-4-ol, carvone, and menthone), which can be found in dairy products, towards 27 lactic acid bacterial strains (thermophilic or mesophilic, homo- or hetero-fermenting cocci), previously isolated from raw goat milk. Results showed that microorganisms were variously affected by the selected molecules. In some cases, terpenoids seemed to have a stimulating action; while in others, a transient antimicrobial activity was highlighted, without evident relationship with the metabolic/physiologic groups to which the tested bacterial strains belonged

    Microbiota of Minas cheese as influenced by the nisin producer Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis GLc05

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    Minas cheese is a popular dairy product in Brazil that is traditionally produced using raw or pasteurized cow milk. This study proposed an alternative production of Minas cheese using raw goat milk added of a nisin producer Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis GLc05. An in situ investigation was carried on to evaluate the interactions between the L. lactis subsp. lactis GLc05 and the autochthonous microbiota of a Minas cheese during the ripening; production of biogenic amines (BA) was assessed as a safety aspect. Minas cheese was produced in two treatments (A, by adding L. lactis subsp. lactis GLc05, and B, without adding this strain), in three independent repetitions (R1, R2, and R3). Culture dependent (direct plating) and independent (rep-PCR and PCR-DGGE) methods were employed to characterize the microbiota and to assess the possible interferences caused by L. lactis subsp. lactis GLc05. BA amounts were measured using HPLC. A significant decrease in coagulase-positive cocci was observed in the cheeses produced by adding L. lactis subsp. lactis GLc05 (cheese A). The rep-PCR and PCR-DGGE highlighted the differences in the microbiota of both cheeses, separating them into two different clusters. Lactococcus sp. was found as the main microorganism in both cheeses, and the microbiota of cheese A presented a higher number of species. High concentrations of tyramine were found in both cheeses and, at specific ripening times, the BA amounts in cheese B were significantly higher than in cheese A (p < 0.05). The interaction of nisin producer L. lactis subsp. lactis GLc05 was demonstrated in situ, by demonstration of its influence in the complex microbiota naturally present in a raw goat milk cheese and by controlling the growth of coagulase-positive cocci. L. lactis subsp. lactis GLc05 influenced also the production of BA determining their amounts in the cheeses were maintained at acceptable levels for human consumption
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