browning reactions

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Browning reactions in food Some foods are naturally brown Some foods are expected to be brown Some are expected not to be brown FSTC 605 MURANO

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Page 1: Browning Reactions

Browning reactions in foods

Some foods are naturally brown

Some foods are expected to be brown

Some are expected not to be brown

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 2: Browning Reactions

Browning can be

Desirable:Cooking meat, bread crust,

coffee, chocolate

Undesirable:Fruits, vegetables, sauces

Much of the undesirable browning occurs during storage

Lowers quality FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 3: Browning Reactions

How do you formulate a food to limit browning?

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 4: Browning Reactions

3 major types of browning in foods

1.) Caramelization

2.) Enzymatic browning

3.) Non-enzymatic browning (Maillard reaction)

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 5: Browning Reactions

Caramelization-Formation of melanoidins by

heating sugar to high temperatures in low water conditions

-No protein or nitrogenouscompounds are involved

-Dehydration reaction resulting in polymerization

-Used to produce caramel colors and flavorsFSTC 605 MURANO

Page 6: Browning Reactions

FSTC 605 MURANO

Generic progression of reaction

1.) Sucrose is dispersed in a small amount of water

-Start with disaccharide

C12H22O11 -Subjected to heat

-Crystals melt at 160C

Page 7: Browning Reactions

2) Heat to 200C for 25 minutes - Loose 4.5% of original weight - Weight loss is water from the

polymerization reaction- Very light brown color

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 8: Browning Reactions

3) Heat to 200C for 55 more minutes- Loose 9% of original weight (water)

Form pigment called Caramelan C24H36O18

Light brown colorSome bitter flavors developing

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 9: Browning Reactions

FSTC 605 MURANO

4) Heat at 200C for an additional 55 min

- Loose about 14% of original weightForm pigment named caramelen

C36H50O25

- More bitter flavors, darker color

Page 10: Browning Reactions

5) Heat at 200C for an additional 55 minFormation of very dark and

very bitter insoluble compoundsForm pigment named caramelin

C125H188O80

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 11: Browning Reactions

Enzymatic browning

Polymerization of phenolic compounds by PPO enzymes

PPO describes all enzymes with the capacity to oxidize phenolic compounds

Figure- PPO action

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 12: Browning Reactions

Important in plant tissues especially wounded tissues

Detrimental in produce color and bitterness

Potato, apple, banana, avocado- loss of quality

Beneficial in coffee and tea production

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 13: Browning Reactions

How to limit enzymatic browning

1)Minimize damage to tissues

2) Exclude or remove molecular oxygen

3) High pressure processing

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 14: Browning Reactions

4) Water soluble antioxidants (ascorbic acid)

5) Blanching- heat treatment to deactivate PPO

6) Metal complexing agents can block active site

7) Sulfites can prevent reactions with enzymes

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 15: Browning Reactions

Non-enzymatic browningi.e. Maillard reaction

Desirable in cooking and baking

Undesirable browning during storage

Cannot stop it, but can limit / control reaction rate

Reactants are in food

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 16: Browning Reactions

1) Amino group

-proteins-peptides

-amino acids

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 17: Browning Reactions

2) Carbonyl group

-aldehydes and keytones

-mostly from reducing sugars

-some can come from oxidized lipids

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 18: Browning Reactions

3) Time-Control reaction velocity by

manipulating product

-moisture, temperature, pH, concentration of reactants

- Temperature is critical2-3X faster for each 10C

rise in storage temperatureFSTC 605 MURANO

Page 19: Browning Reactions

Involves a complex series of reactions

Figure – reaction sequence

3 major steps

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 20: Browning Reactions

1) Condensation of carbonyl group with free amino group

Carbonyl + Free Glycosamine + water Group amino

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 21: Browning Reactions

2) Rearrangement of glycosamine to produce flavor and odor compounds

3) Polymerization into larger melanoidin compounds- color development

FSTC 605 MURANO

Page 22: Browning Reactions

Limiting Maillard reaction in foods

1)Keep product cool

2) Limit reducing sugars

3) Optimize pH and moisture

4) Add inhibitors- sulfur dioxide- reacts with intermediate

- products to prevent polymerizationFSTC 605 MURANO