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Cream

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If lose membrane material, proteins adsorb onto surface. Crystallization in a globule ... substance especially proteins are not adsorbed onto the interface ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cream


1
Cream
2
  • Fat globules
  • Size distribution
  • Number of particles with a certain diameter
  • dvs Volume of dispersed fat/surface area 3.4 ?m
  • Shape of size distribution constant
  • Surface layer
  • Protein glycoproteins, enzymes
  • Phospholipids
  • Cerebrosides
  • Cholesterol
  • Monoglycerides, free fatty acids
  • Cu, Fe, carotenoids
  • Water
  • 10-20 nm thickness, negative charge (-12 mV)
  • 1-1.5 mN/m interfacial tension

3
  • Coalesence decreases surface area, release of
    membrane material
  • Air contact, loss of part of membrane
  • Cooling, migration of membrane material to
    plasma, 20 of phospholipids, some protein,
    xanthine oxidase, Cu
  • Adsorption of cryoglobulins (immunoglobulin M,
    lipoproteins)
  • If lose membrane material, proteins adsorb onto
    surface

4
  • Crystallization in a globule
  • Network formation
  • Variation with respect to composition
  • Summer vs winter
  • triglycerides
  • Size differences

5
  • Emulsion stability
  • Creaming
  • Flocculation and coalescence
  • Aggregates
  • Floccules spontaneous
  • but electrostatic and steric repulsions on the
    membrane
  • Agglutination
  • Clusters two globules share part of the membrane
    (micellar casein), homogenization clusters,
    heat-coagulated clusters
  • Granules interaction of fat, network of fat
    crystals, rigidity

6
Coalescence
  • Interaction between two droplets
  • True coalescence Film between the globules is
    ruptured and globules can coalesce into one
    droplet
  • Large globules formed from small globules
  • Unhomogenized milk at sterilization temperature
  • Partial coalescence If globules contain fat
    crystals, film can be pierced by crystals
    sticking out of the globule
  • Large, irregularly shaped granules
  • Easily occur if solid fat present

7
Factors affecting partial coalescence
  • Stirring
  • Beating in of air
  • Fat content
  • Solid fat content
  • Too much, liquid fat is entrapped in crystals and
    no adhesion between the globules
  • Size
  • The smaller the more stable globules
  • Larger crystals can pierce easily
  • Surface layer
  • Protein more stable, homogenization
  • Surfactants less stable

8
  • Disruption of fat globules
  • Beating in of air
  • Intense turbulence by homogenization
  • Shearing stress exerted on the globule of
    diameter d should exceed the resistance to
    deformation as caused by Laplace pressure (4?/d)

9
Interaction with air bubbles
  • When a milk fat globule contact with air-water
    interface, membrane material and part of its
    contents spread over the interface
  • If no other surface-active substance especially
    proteins are not adsorbed onto the interface
  • Globules can attach to the interface and to an
    air bubble
  • Globule can be in contact with an air bubble or
    between the bubbles
  • Electrostatic and steric repulsions prevent
    rupture of the interface
  • If solid fat crystals present, they can pierce
    the interface and globule can contact air, spread
    its membrane material over the interface, rupture
    of foam lamella

10
  • Beating in of air
  • Churning
  • Continuously formed new air-water interface
  • Fat spread over the interface
  • If fat is liquid, breaking up of air bubbles
    covered with fat causes disruption of fat
  • If globules also contain solid fat, they become
    attached to air bubbles,
  • Air bubbles tend to coalesce, air surface area
    diminishes, attached fat globules come closer,
    liquid fat spreads over the air bubble causing
    the globules to form granules
  • Further aggregation of granules yields butter
    grains
  • Phase inversion
  • Concentrating and working the grains remove
    excess moisture, reduce moisture droplet size,
    butter

11
  • Whipping
  • High fat content
  • Very little liquid fat
  • Fat clumps
  • Network formation entrapping air bubbles

12
Creaming
  • Density difference between plasma and fat
    globules according to Stokess equation
  • Globule size and temperature determine extent of
    creaming in high-pasteurized milk
  • Homogenization
  • Temperature reduces density and viscosity
  • Clusters speeds up creaming
  • Homogenization, sterilization

13
  • Temperature
  • Concentration of agglutinin
  • Lactation, individual cow
  • Fat globule size
  • Fat content
  • Agitation at low T, agglutinins aggregate so
    less available for aggregation
  • Warming restores flocculation ability,
    dissociates agglutinin from the aggregates
  • Heat treatment inactivate agglutinin, 78C
    complete
  • Homogenization inactivates agglutinin

14
Homogenization
  • Prevent creaming
  • Reduce globule size
  • Prevent partial coalescence
  • Reduce globule size
  • Acquired surface layer, casein and serum proteins
  • Creating desirable rheological properties
  • Formation of homogenization clusters
  • Increase in viscosity

15
Homogenization
  • Liquid stream has a high potential energy
  • On entering the valve, the energy is converted
    into kinetic energy, high velocity in the narrow
    gap causes intense turbulence
  • Kinetic energy of the liquid is converted mostly
    to heat, ?1 of the energy is used for disruption
    of the globules (interfacial energy)
  • Intense turbulence, small eddies in which high
    liquid velocity gradients occur, pressure
    fluctuations can disrupt particles
  • Cavitation sudden formation and collapse of
    vapor bubbles caused by pressure fluctuations
  • 40-75C, upto 40 MPa

16
  • Homogenization clusters
  • Homogenization of cream
  • Large agglomerates of fat globules, 105
  • Interconnected by casein micelles
  • Protein is not too high to cover up all the
    surface
  • Clusters contain interstitial liquid, effective
    volume fraction of particles increases
  • Viscosity increases
  • High fat content (gt9 fat), low protein content,
    high pressure, high surface excess of protein
    (low T, intense preheating, high P)
  • Two-stage homogenization
  • At low P (0.1 MPa), can disrupt clusters but not
    disrupt the fat globules

17
Cream products
  • 10-48 fat
  • No off-flavor
  • Stable to oxidation and lipolysis
  • Sterilization
  • Homogenization
  • Coffee cream
  • Dessert cream
  • White color, no oil droplets

18
  • In-bottle sterilization
  • 115C / 20 min
  • UHT sterilization
  • Homogenization after sterilization
  • Coagulation of proteins and fat globules cause
    coalescence of fat globules
  • For high viscosity, homogenization at lower T at
    one stage, formation of homogenization clusters

19
  • Heat stability
  • As the surface area of fat globules covered by
    caseins increases, less heat stability
  • Higher homogenization pressure lower heat
    stability (more casein on the surface)
  • Lower P, creaming and partial coalescence
  • Compromise between high and low P
  • Feathering in coffee, coagulation of fat globules
  • Age thickening, T, pH, Ca activity
  • Can increase solid-non-fat content

20
  • Clustering
  • Desirable in dessert cream
  • High viscosity
  • Homogenization clusters, thickening agents
    (carrageenan, alginate)
  • Larger volume fraction of fat globules
  • Entrapped plasma between the globules
  • Irregularly shaped clusters
  • High fat content
  • Can prevent clustering by a second stage
    homogenization

21
Whipping cream
  • 35-40 fat
  • Beaten into a foam with or without sugar
  • Pasteurized not to change flavor
  • Keeping quality
  • No Bacillus cereus
  • No heat-resistant lipases
  • Recontamination avoided
  • In-can or in-bottle pasteurization
  • Cu contamination avoided
  • Whippability fast, homogeneous, firm texture,
    50 v/v air (100 overrun)
  • Retain its shape, remain stable, not exhibit
    coarsening of the air cells, show negligible
    leakage of the liquid
  • Thickener carrageenan
  • Overrun Relative increase in volume by air
    beaten in

22
  • Pasteurization
  • High enough to inactivate milk lipase, improve
    keeping quality
  • 85C/30 min, 103C/20 min in-can heating
  • No pumping unless fat is completely liquid or
    solid
  • Homogenization applied before in-bottle or in-can
    pasteurization, but whippability decreases
  • UHT heating preferred (also for flavor),
    homogenization at low P after heating
  • T fluctuations avoided as it causes rebodying and
    increase in viscosity, impairs whippability

23
Whipping
  • Refrigeration for a day to obtain some fat
    crystals
  • To prevent creaming during storage thickener
    added (0.01 ?-carrageenan)
  • Beating
  • Air incorporation into the structure
  • Fat globules penetrate into the air-water
    interface attaching themselves on the surface
  • Spread some liquid fat onto the bubble surface
  • Since concentration of fat globules is high, they
    cover the surface of the bubbles and prevent
    their coalescence but they partially coalesce
    themselves
  • Clumped fat globules enclosing air bubbles and
    giving a rigid and stable foam
  • Size of air cells and fat clumps should be
    similar in size
  • The foam increases in firmness during whipping
    but it also becomes coarser
  • On prolonged beating, clumps become large and
    few, butter grains formed

24
  • Balance between foaming and churning
  • Depends on speed of beating
  • Too slow churn prematurely
  • Vigorous beating high overrun, finely structured
    smooth foam
  • The smaller the air cells less clumping needed to
    enclose bubbles, a firm foam is obtained
  • Fat globules diminish overrun, should not
    destabilize the bubbles
  • Reducing globule size
  • Proteins and surfactants may increase foam
    stability but they do not encapsulate the
    bubbles, but have a high overrun, unstable to
    manipulation

25
Factors
  • Fat content
  • The more intense beating, the lower the fat
    content, the higher the overrun
  • Crystallization of the fat is essential for
    clumping
  • If too much liquid fat, clumping is too rapid,
    foam becomes unstable
  • Deep cooling and sufficient time for
    crystallization
  • Composition of cream
  • Protein is needed to form foam cells at the
    beginning
  • Addition of thickening agents, reduce leakage of
    liquid
  • Homogenization impairs whippability
  • Too small globules cannot clump
  • Homogenization clusters better
  • Two stage homogenization at low P
  • Addition of surface-active substances decreases
    formation of clusters and increases the tendency
    to clumping, monoglyceride or Tween
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