Effects of different dairy ingredients on the rheological behaviour and stability of hot cheese emulsions

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Effects of different dairy ingredients on the rheological behaviour and stability of hot cheese emulsions. / Kelimu, Abulimiti; Felix da Silva, Denise; Geng, Xiaolu; Ipsen, Richard; Hougaard, Anni Bygvrå.

In: International Dairy Journal, Vol. 71, 2017, p. 35-42.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kelimu, A, Felix da Silva, D, Geng, X, Ipsen, R & Hougaard, AB 2017, 'Effects of different dairy ingredients on the rheological behaviour and stability of hot cheese emulsions', International Dairy Journal, vol. 71, pp. 35-42. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.idairyj.2017.02.005

APA

Kelimu, A., Felix da Silva, D., Geng, X., Ipsen, R., & Hougaard, A. B. (2017). Effects of different dairy ingredients on the rheological behaviour and stability of hot cheese emulsions. International Dairy Journal, 71, 35-42. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.idairyj.2017.02.005

Vancouver

Kelimu A, Felix da Silva D, Geng X, Ipsen R, Hougaard AB. Effects of different dairy ingredients on the rheological behaviour and stability of hot cheese emulsions. International Dairy Journal. 2017;71:35-42. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.idairyj.2017.02.005

Author

Kelimu, Abulimiti ; Felix da Silva, Denise ; Geng, Xiaolu ; Ipsen, Richard ; Hougaard, Anni Bygvrå. / Effects of different dairy ingredients on the rheological behaviour and stability of hot cheese emulsions. In: International Dairy Journal. 2017 ; Vol. 71. pp. 35-42.

Bibtex

@article{7d636d8dab1740c6af256b3313046619,
title = "Effects of different dairy ingredients on the rheological behaviour and stability of hot cheese emulsions",
abstract = "The influence of sodium caseinate (SC), butter milk powder (BMP) and their combinations on particle size, rheological properties, emulsion stability and microstructure of hot cheese emulsions made from mixtures of Cheddar and soft white cheese was studied. All emulsions exhibited shear-thinning flow behaviour and increasing SC concentration (1–4%) led to an increase in particle size and a decrease in apparent viscosity. In contrast, increasing BMP concentration caused significant decrease in particle size and slightly reduced the apparent viscosity. Stability against creaming and precipitation increased with increasing concentration of SC, whereas BMP destabilised the emulsions resulting in extensive precipitation. Confocal laser scanning microscopy images showed that SC exerted markedly better emulsification ability than BMP. Emulsions containing equal amounts of SC and BMP presented better stability against creaming and precipitation and this could be developed into a novel strategy to replace emulsifying salts in production of cheese powder.",
author = "Abulimiti Kelimu and {Felix da Silva}, Denise and Xiaolu Geng and Richard Ipsen and Hougaard, {Anni Bygvr{\aa}}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1016/j.idairyj.2017.02.005",
language = "English",
volume = "71",
pages = "35--42",
journal = "International Dairy Journal",
issn = "0958-6946",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effects of different dairy ingredients on the rheological behaviour and stability of hot cheese emulsions

AU - Kelimu, Abulimiti

AU - Felix da Silva, Denise

AU - Geng, Xiaolu

AU - Ipsen, Richard

AU - Hougaard, Anni Bygvrå

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - The influence of sodium caseinate (SC), butter milk powder (BMP) and their combinations on particle size, rheological properties, emulsion stability and microstructure of hot cheese emulsions made from mixtures of Cheddar and soft white cheese was studied. All emulsions exhibited shear-thinning flow behaviour and increasing SC concentration (1–4%) led to an increase in particle size and a decrease in apparent viscosity. In contrast, increasing BMP concentration caused significant decrease in particle size and slightly reduced the apparent viscosity. Stability against creaming and precipitation increased with increasing concentration of SC, whereas BMP destabilised the emulsions resulting in extensive precipitation. Confocal laser scanning microscopy images showed that SC exerted markedly better emulsification ability than BMP. Emulsions containing equal amounts of SC and BMP presented better stability against creaming and precipitation and this could be developed into a novel strategy to replace emulsifying salts in production of cheese powder.

AB - The influence of sodium caseinate (SC), butter milk powder (BMP) and their combinations on particle size, rheological properties, emulsion stability and microstructure of hot cheese emulsions made from mixtures of Cheddar and soft white cheese was studied. All emulsions exhibited shear-thinning flow behaviour and increasing SC concentration (1–4%) led to an increase in particle size and a decrease in apparent viscosity. In contrast, increasing BMP concentration caused significant decrease in particle size and slightly reduced the apparent viscosity. Stability against creaming and precipitation increased with increasing concentration of SC, whereas BMP destabilised the emulsions resulting in extensive precipitation. Confocal laser scanning microscopy images showed that SC exerted markedly better emulsification ability than BMP. Emulsions containing equal amounts of SC and BMP presented better stability against creaming and precipitation and this could be developed into a novel strategy to replace emulsifying salts in production of cheese powder.

U2 - 10.1016/j.idairyj.2017.02.005

DO - 10.1016/j.idairyj.2017.02.005

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85016502659

VL - 71

SP - 35

EP - 42

JO - International Dairy Journal

JF - International Dairy Journal

SN - 0958-6946

ER -

ID: 176653798