• Title/Summary/Keyword: food-color

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Physio-Chemical Studies on the After-Ripeng of Hot Pepper Fruit -Part VII. Effects of Ethephon on the Major Compoments- (신미종(辛未種) 고추의 추숙(追熟)에 관(關)한 생리화학적(生理化學的) 연구(硏究) -제7보 주요성분(主要成分)에 미치는 Ethephon의 효과(?果)-)

  • Lee, Sung-Woo;Kim, Kwang-Soo;Kim, Soon-Dong
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.7 no.4
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    • pp.194-199
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    • 1975
  • The physiological and chemical investigations to explain the after-ripening processes in got green pepper fruit were carried out by treating the fruit with ethephon either alone or with phenylalanine. The studied metabolic changes in fruit during after-ripening period was carbon dioxide and oxygen concentration in interior of the pepper fruit, total carotenoid, ${\beta}-carotene$, total sugar, and free reducing sugar in pepper fruit. These metabolic changes were explained inrelation to the color enhancement judged by the color score to explain the after-ripening processes. Ethephon treatment at 500 ppm significantly accelerated color enhancement as compared to the control and further ethephon treatment increased the number by 20 percent which was not possible in control during same after-ripening period. The oxygen concentration in interior of the pepper fruit during after-ripening period was increased in control when the color score (color enhancement) increased rapidly. However, with ethephon treatment, the oxygen concentration was decreased when the color score increased. Although total and free reducing sugar content were decreased during the after-ripening period total carotenoid and ${\beta}-carotene$ content was increased by 50 and 200 percent, respectively, over control. Also the capsaicin contents was increased by 20 percent by ethephon treatment over control. Although phenylalanine treatment did not affect the capsaicin content, capsaicin content tended to be increased by phenylalanine treatment when treated with ethephon. Acknowledgements: This work was supported by funds from Korean Traders Scholarship Foundation.

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Comparison of Physiological Properties of Gamma-Irradiated Root and Stolen Extracts of Gamcho (Licorice, Glycyrrhiza uralensis Fischer)

  • Cheorun ;Kim, Myung-Cheol;Kim, Kwan-Soo;Kang, Seong-Mo;Kim, Chi-Bong;Lee, Hyun-Ja;Byun, Myung-Woo
    • Preventive Nutrition and Food Science
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    • v.7 no.3
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    • pp.273-277
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    • 2002
  • Physiological properties of root and stolen of Gamcho (Licorice, Glycyrrhiza uralensis Fischer) were compared following irradiation at 20 kGy. The root and stolen of Gamcho were extracted with 70 % ethanol, irradiated and stoved in a 4"C refrigerator. Irradiation induced color changes, electron donating ability (EDA), and tyro-sinase inhibition effect (TIE) were investigated. The color of the non-irradiated stolen extract was darker than the non-irradiated root extract (p<0.05), but irradiation eliminated color differences between stolen and root extracts. Generally, irradiation did not affect EDA and TIE of either of the extracts. However, EDA and TIE were higher in stolen extract than in root extract, when the higher dilution factor was considered. These results indicate that the stolen of Gamcho, which is mostly wasted, is a valuable source of phytochemicals with greater EDA and TIE activities than Gamcho root.root.

Effect of Pre-treatment and Storage Conditions on the Quality Characteristics of Ginger Paste

  • Choi, Eun-Jeong;Lee, Kyung-A;Kim, Byeong-Sam;Ku, Kyung-Hyung
    • Preventive Nutrition and Food Science
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    • v.17 no.1
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    • pp.46-52
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    • 2012
  • This study was performed to investigate the effects of pre-treatment and storage temperature and periods on the quality characteristics of ginger paste. The pH of the ginger paste remained constant during room temperature storage but increased with prolonged refrigerated storage periods. During five months of frozen storage, regardless of pre-treatment, the pH of most of the samples decreased slightly and then remained constant. In the color value of ginger paste stored at room temperature, the samples with and without chemical additives changed in color more prominently than fermented or pasteurized samples. Intriguingly, the color value for samples containing chemical additives changed more dramatically when stored under refrigerated conditions. However, the L, a, and b values of samples stored under frozen storage conditions did not change even after ten months. Most of the samples contained glucose and fructose, except for the fermented samples. The free sugar content of samples slowly decreased with increasing storage periods, while the organic acid content generally decreased also, regardless of sample type. Depending on pre-treatment and storage temperature, the gingerol content of the samples was either retained or decreased with prolonged storage time.

Application of time-temperature indicators for cooling and frozen food storage and distribution (저장 조건 감지 지표 장치의 특성 및 식품에의 응용 가능성)

  • An, Duek-Jun;Yoo, Seung-Seok
    • KOREAN JOURNAL OF PACKAGING SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
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    • v.5 no.1
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    • pp.25-29
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    • 1999
  • Time-temperature indicators (TTI) from three different companies obtained and were attached to food packages materials to evaluate degree of their color change according to storage time and temperature. Five temperature (-10 -5, 0, 5 and 10) was selected to represent standard freezing, refrigerating and room temperature, and evaluated performance by color change based on magnitude of color change and hunter system (L, a, b). Response end point was measured and recorded to find characteristic of each indicator. Comparison and discussion were conducted for accuracy and precision of each time-temperature. More research should be conducted at variable temperature and with various food to determine applicability of TTI on various storage condition.

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Preparation and Quality of Dried Yam Chip Snack Coated with Ascorbic Acid Cocrystallized Sucrose

  • Kim, Suk-Shin;Koh, Kyung-Hee;Son, Sook-Mee;Oh, Myung-Suk
    • Food Science and Biotechnology
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    • v.14 no.5
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    • pp.661-666
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    • 2005
  • The specific objectives of this study were to dry yam chips using microwave vacuum drying, freeze drying and hot air drying, then to coat the dried yam chips with ascorbic acid cocrystallized sucrose, and finally to compare the quality of yam chip snack foods with respect to drying and coating characteristics. The microwave vacuum dried sample showed the highest drying rates and much less surface damage than the hot air dried one did. The shape and color of the microwave vacuum dried/coated sample were allocated between those of the freeze dried/coated sample and the hot air dried/coated sample. The freeze dried/coated sample scored excessively low in organoleptic hardness and chewiness to be suitable as a snack. The hot air dried/coated sample was too deep in color, wrinkled, excessively high in organoleptic hardness and chewiness, and excessively low in mouthfeeling. Therefore, the microwave vacuum dried/coated sample presented the best overall attributes as a snack, with respect to organoleptic characteristics, shape, color, and drying rates.

Maillard Browning Reaction of D-Psicose as Affected by Reaction Factors

  • Baek, Seung-Hee;Kwon, So-Young;Lee, Hyeon-Gyu;Baek, Hyung-Hee
    • Food Science and Biotechnology
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    • v.17 no.6
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    • pp.1349-1351
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    • 2008
  • This study examined the effects of temperature, D-psicose concentration, pH, and various amino acids on the Maillard browning reaction of D-psicose and glycine mixture and compared browning color intensity with those of other sugars, such as sucrose, D-glucose, D-fructose, and D-tagatose. When D-psicose (0.1 M) and glycine (0.1 M) mixture was heated at $70-100^{\circ}C$ for 5 hr, the absorbance at 420 nm increased with increasing reaction temperature and time. The Hunter a, b values, and color difference (${\Delta}E$) increased with increasing D-psicose concentration and pH within the range of pH 3-7 except at pH 6, while the L value decreased. The rate of Maillard browning reaction was in order of D-tagatose>D-psicose $\fallingdotseq$ D-fructose>D-glucose>sucrose. The browning color intensity of the D-psicose-basic and non-polar amino acids mixtures was higher than that of the D-psicose-acidic amino acids.

Visibility Enhancement of Laccase-Based Time Temperature Integrator Color by Increasing Opacity

  • Kim, Hyun Chul;Cha, Hee Jin;Shin, Dong Un;Koo, Yong Keun;Cho, Hye Won;Lee, Seung Ju
    • KOREAN JOURNAL OF PACKAGING SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
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    • v.27 no.2
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    • pp.101-107
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    • 2021
  • Time-temperature integrators (TTIs) based on aqueous enzyme solutions produce transparent colors which lead to difficulty in distinguishing its color change by naked eye. In this present study, this issue has been solved by increasing the opacity of laccase-based TTI without changes in the kinetics (same zero-order reaction) and temperature dependency (similar Arrhenius activation energy values) of the color change. The opacity was increased by introducing TiO2, latex, BaSO4, or ZnO, in combination with a hydrocolloid (xanthan gum, acacia gum, pectin, and CMC) into the TTI system. The combination of TiO2 and xanthan gum was the best. This finding broadened the advantages of laccase-based TTI to more practical uses for consumer convenience.

Optimization of Muffin Preparation by Addition of Dried Burdock (Arctium lappa L) Powder and Oligosaccharide by Response Surface Methodology (반응표면분석법을 이용한 우엉가루와 올리고당 첨가 머핀의 제조 조건 최적화)

  • Kim, Mi-Kyung;Kim, Weon-Mo;Lee, Hey-Joeng;Choi, Eun-Young
    • Korean journal of food and cookery science
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    • v.26 no.5
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    • pp.575-585
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    • 2010
  • This study was performed to determine the optimal composition of a muffin administered dried burdock powder and oligosaccharide. The experiment was designed base on CCD (Central Composite Design), and evaluation was carried out by means of RSM (Response Surface Methodology), which included 10 experimental points with 3 replicates for the two independent variables burdock powder and oligosaccharide. The experimental muffin was made according to a traditional recipe, except that the flour was partially replaced with dried burdock powder (5%, 15%, 25%) and the sugar was partially replaced with oligosaccharide (25%, 50%, 75%). The compositional and functional properties of the prepared products were measured, and these values were applied to the mathematical models. Using the F-test, volume, height, pH, yellowness, chewiness, resilience, springiness, cohesiveness, taste, and overall quality were expressed as a linear model, whereas lightness, redness, adhesiveness, color, flavor, and overall quality were expressed as a quadratic model. The polynomial models developed by RSM for sensory evaluation, color, flavor, texture, taste, and overall quality were highly effective in describing the relationships between the factors (p<0.01). The estimated response surfaces confirmed that the amount of burdock powder had significant effects on color, taste, texture, flavor, and overall quality (p<0.01), whereas and the amount of oligosaccharide had significant effects on color and texture (p<0.01). Increased amount of burdock powder led to reductions of the sensory scores for color, taste, texture, flavor, and overall quality at all oligosaccharide levels. The optimal mixing percentage of burdock powder and oligosaccharide muffin were determined to be 5.00% and 46.25%, respectively.

STUDIES ON THE SHELLFISH PRODESSING 5. Effect of EDTA and BHA in Color Preservation of Canned Surf Clam Meat (패류 가공에 관한 연구 5. EDTA 및 BHA 처리가 개량조개 보일드 통조림의 변색 방지에 미치는 효과에 대하여)

  • Lee Eung-Ho;HUR Jong-Wha;HAN Bong-Ho;KiM Yong-Gun;PARK Yeung-Ho
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.4 no.1
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    • pp.17-21
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    • 1971
  • The effect of EDTA or BHA pretreatment upon the color preservation of canned surf clam meat during canning and storage was studied. The steamed surf clam meat was soaked in BHA solution, $0.1\%$ BHA in $5\%$ salt solution, or EDTA solution, $0.5\%\;Na_2$ EDTA in $5\%$ salt solution, for 30 minutes. The pretreated surf clam meat was packed in a round enameled can that is 223.2 ml by volume and sterilized for 75 minutes at $110^{\circ}C$. The canned products were stored for one year at room temperature. The EDTA treatment of surf clam meat appeared effective on color preservation during processing. After three month storage, the samples showed little color change comparing with those right after processing. After one year storage, EDTA or BHA treated samples showed better color preservation as compared with control.

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Changes in Color Value and Chemical Components of Hoelen by Various Drying Methods (건조방법에 따른 복령의 색도 및 화학성분의 변화)

  • Jee, Jae-Hyung;Lee, Hyun-Dong;Chung, Shin-Kyo;Choi, Jong-Uck
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.31 no.3
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    • pp.575-580
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    • 1999
  • In this study, the quality changes of Hoelen was investigated, which were color differences, browning degrees, total phenolic compounds and electron donating abilities to optimize drying condition using hot air and far infrared drying by changing conditions such as temperatures, air velocities and radiation distances. In color values, ${\Delta}b\;value$ decreased with increasing temperatures, while ${\Delta}L$, ${\Delta}a$ and ${\Delta}E\;value$ increased. The browning degrees showed the similar tendency with the color values. Total phenolic components of Hoelen decreased with increasing drying temperature and air velocity, and decreasing radiation distance. On the other hand, there was no significant difference in the changes of electron donating abilities (EDA) of Hoelen among drying methods and conditions. As a result, the hot air drying was more effective method than the far infrared was.

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