Effect of Storage on the Textural Profile of Insoluble Fibre Incorporating UHT Beverage
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Published:29 Mar 2016
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Special Collection: 2016 ebook collection
N. K. Alqahtani, J. Ashton, L. Katopo, E. Haque, O. A. H. Jones, and S. Kasapis, in Gums and Stabilisers for the Food Industry 18: Hydrocolloid Functionality for Affordable and Sustainable Global Food Solutions, ed. P. A. Williams and G. Phillips, The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2016, pp. 295-304.
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The investigation deals with the effect of incorporating insoluble fibre in UHT treated beverages in order to improve the nutritional profile of these product concepts. A variety of insoluble fibres are used including orange fibre, kibbled wheat fibre and oat fibre, whose particle size distribution ranges over an order of magnitude from 372 to 35 µm. The work demonstrates that the overall acceptability of UHT beverages is significantly affected by the particle size distribution and level of fibre addition varying from 0.5 to 5% w/w in formulations. Results indicate a positive relationship between fibre characteristics and beverage consistency, with increasing concentration or size distribution in particles yielding higher steady-shear viscosity. Further, extended storage over 12 weeks at 22 °C exhibits increasing viscosity at a given concentration and type of fibre, whereas storage at 30 °C results in increasing flow, which is an interesting outcome for the commercialisation of the industrially based formulations.