TY - JOUR
T1 - Mix it up
T2 - Stability of oil-in-water emulsions made with commercial pea and potato protein isolate as emulsifier
AU - Mosselman, Melissa J.
AU - Hennebelle, Marie
AU - Keijer, Jaap
AU - Timmers, Silvie
AU - Keppler, Julia K.
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - Vegan foods are increasingly popular. Developing such foods requires commercially available plant-based ingredients that can stabilize an emulsion at suitable pH and after pasteurization. Isolates from pea, potato, or their mixtures might be used as such emulsifiers, but not much is known about which isolate or mixture would be best suited under the required conditions. We thus determined if individual or mixed commercial pea (PePI) and potato protein isolate (PoPI) improve the physical and oxidative stability of oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions at various relevant pH values (3,4,7), after pasteurization and one-week storage. Individual formulations of PePI and PoPI as well as mixtures of PePI and PoPI (PePI-PoPI) were most promising at pH 3, because of the high zeta potential (> 30 mV) and the low average droplet size of the resulting emulsions (< 2 μm). PePI induced droplet flocculation, although the droplet size remained unchanged after pasteurization and storage. When mixtures of PoPI and PePI were used as emulsifier, flocculated droplets partly coalesced. For all emulsions, the measured lipid oxidation products remained below 5 mmol/kg oil after pasteurization and one-week of storage. Mixing PoPI and PePI thus did not improve the physical stability after pasteurization and one-week shelf-life, and we therefore recommend using either PePI or PoPI as emulsifier due to less coalescence. However, at pH 3, we additionally hypothesize that mixing (PePI-PoPI ratio 25:75 or 75:25) could still be relevant for other properties that are important during product development, such as digestibility and taste.
AB - Vegan foods are increasingly popular. Developing such foods requires commercially available plant-based ingredients that can stabilize an emulsion at suitable pH and after pasteurization. Isolates from pea, potato, or their mixtures might be used as such emulsifiers, but not much is known about which isolate or mixture would be best suited under the required conditions. We thus determined if individual or mixed commercial pea (PePI) and potato protein isolate (PoPI) improve the physical and oxidative stability of oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions at various relevant pH values (3,4,7), after pasteurization and one-week storage. Individual formulations of PePI and PoPI as well as mixtures of PePI and PoPI (PePI-PoPI) were most promising at pH 3, because of the high zeta potential (> 30 mV) and the low average droplet size of the resulting emulsions (< 2 μm). PePI induced droplet flocculation, although the droplet size remained unchanged after pasteurization and storage. When mixtures of PoPI and PePI were used as emulsifier, flocculated droplets partly coalesced. For all emulsions, the measured lipid oxidation products remained below 5 mmol/kg oil after pasteurization and one-week of storage. Mixing PoPI and PePI thus did not improve the physical stability after pasteurization and one-week shelf-life, and we therefore recommend using either PePI or PoPI as emulsifier due to less coalescence. However, at pH 3, we additionally hypothesize that mixing (PePI-PoPI ratio 25:75 or 75:25) could still be relevant for other properties that are important during product development, such as digestibility and taste.
KW - Emulsion stability
KW - Lipid oxidation
KW - Microalgal oil
KW - Mixed emulsifiers
KW - Pea protein isolate
KW - Potato protein isolate
U2 - 10.1016/j.ifset.2024.103902
DO - 10.1016/j.ifset.2024.103902
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85213038382
SN - 1466-8564
VL - 100
JO - Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies
JF - Innovative Food Science and Emerging Technologies
M1 - 103902
ER -