• Title/Summary/Keyword: Fermented seafoods

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Effects of Jeotkal Addition on Quality of Kimchi (젓갈의 첨가가 김치의 품질에 미치는 영향)

  • Ko, Young-Tae;Hwang, Ja-Kyung;Baik, In-Hee
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.36 no.1
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    • pp.123-128
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    • 2004
  • Effects of jeotkal (salted-fermented seafoods) addition on acid production, growth of lactic acid bacteria, sensory properties, and volatile odor components of kimchi were investigated. Changes in pH and acidity of kimchi added with myulchi-aekjeot, kanari-aekjeot, and aekche-Jukjeot were similar to, whereas those of saeu-jeot sample on 0, 2, and 4 days of ripening were slightly different, those of control sample. Changes in pH and acidity of jogae-jeot sample during whole ripening period were markedly different from those of other samples. Numbers of lactic acid bacteria of all samples on 0 and 4 days were $1.8-2.6{\times}10^{5}\;and\;1.0-2.5{\times}10^{9}\;CFU/mL$, respectively. Overall acceptability and taste of kimchi added with jeotkal except jogae-jeot were higher than those of control sample, with saeu-jeot-added kimchi showing the highest scores. Eight volatile odor components were identified in 6-day-ripened kimchi samples, and those of saeu-jeot sample were slightly higher than those of other samples. Diallyl sulfide and methyl propyl disulfide were produced in 6-day-ripened samples. Ethanol, methyl allyl sulfide, and dimethyl disulfide concentrations increased, whereas that of allyl mercaptan decreased in 6-day-ripened samples compared to unripened ones.

A Study on the Food-culture's Property of the Traditional Generation through the Oral Interview (구술을 통한 전통세대의 음식문화특성 연구)

  • Kim, Mi-Hye;Chung, Hae-Kyung
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.24 no.6
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    • pp.613-630
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    • 2009
  • This thesis, which involves honest life stories of members of the ìtraditionalî Korean generation that lived through the turbulent times of the first half of the twentieth century, assesses the meaning and import of Korean cuisine during an individual Korean's lifetime, as well as the relevant properties of the culinary culture of the traditional generation and how those properties continue to influence the present generation of Koreans. Thus, traditional Korean culinary culture was subdivided into the following four aspects, each of which were exemplified by representative examples. The first of these is slow-food dietary life, which is exemplified by fermented foods. The development of side dishes (panchan) based on fermentation - kimchi, different types of soy and bean paste, salted seafoods, dishes of dried radish or cucumber slices seasoned with soy sauce, and so on - made the quantitative and qualitative supplementation of food possible for traditional Koreans. The second of these aspects, referred to as friendly dietary life, is exemplified by self-sufficiently produced foods. The system of many species and small production suitable with the season made it possible to produce food from sustainable ecological systems and to maintain locally grown food-cultures, each of which was distinguished from others by a local specialty product. The third aspect of the traditional Korean culinary culture involves the same use of medicinal roots and plant materials for foodstuff, and this is exemplified by the use of foods to cure and prevent diseases. The notion, for example, that 'boiled rice is an invigorant' is characteristic of the notion that diet can function in a preventative medical context, and other similar Korean notions illustrate the importance, also, of the curative properties of food. The fourth and final aspect of traditional Korean culinary culture identified herein is creative dietary life, which can be viewed essentially as a Korean adaptation to the turbulence of life during the early $20^{th}$ century in Korea. This trend is exemplified by many Korean foods that were created in response to foreign influences, such as onions, cabbages, curry, etc. which found their place in overall Korean culture through the age of Japanese settlement, as well as the Korean war.

Production of γ-amino Butyric Acid by Lactic Acid Bacteria in Skim Milk (탈지방우유에서 가바생성 유산균 배양을 통한 가바생성 연구)

  • Cha, Jin Young;Kim, Young Rok;Beck, Bo Ram;Park, Ji Hun;Hwang, Cher Won;Do, Hyung Ki
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.28 no.2
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    • pp.223-228
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    • 2018
  • Lactic acid bacteria were isolated from a variety of fermented seafoods and sea creatures from the East Sea Rim, Korea and were screened for ${\gamma}-amino$ butyric acid-producing (GABA) activity. Through a 16S rRNA sequence analysis, the bacteria of interest, which were GABA-positive on the thin-layer chromatography analysis, were recognized as three isolates of Lactobacillus (Lb.) brevis and one isolate of Lactococcus (Lc.) lactis. Lb. brevis FSFL0004 and FSFL0005 were isolated from fermented anglerfish and Lb. brevis FSFL0036 was derived from salted cutlass fish. The Lc. lactis strain FGL0007 was isolated from the gut of a brown sole flounder. According to HPLC analysis, the GABA contents produced by FSFL0004, FSFL0005, FSFL0036 and FGL0007 were equivalent to $10,754.37{\mu}g/ml$, $13,082.79{\mu}g/ml$, $12,290.19{\mu}g/ml$, and $45.07{\mu}g/ml$ respectively in 1% monosodium glutamate-supplemented methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MRS) broth. The four strains were inoculated in skim milk with 1% monosodium glutamate to commercialize the strains as starter cultures for GABA-enriched dairy products, and TLC results displayed the production of ${\gamma}-amino$ butyric acid by all four strains in the adaptation media. Lc. lactis FGL0007 demonstrated the greatest GABA production ($431.42{\mu}g/ml$) by HPLC analysis. The GABA production by lactic acid bacteria strains in the skim milk demonstrated in the present study may be helpful for the production of GABA-enriched dairy products.