A Non-yeast Kefir-like Fermented Milk Development with Lactobacillus acidophilus KCNU and Lactobacillus brevis Bmb6
The use of yeast assist kefir fermentation, but also can cause food spoilage if uncontrolled. Hence, in this study, the microbial composition of an existing commercial kefir starter was modified to produce a functional starter, where Lactobacillus acidophilus KCNU and Lactobacillus brevis Bmb6 were...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Food science of animal resources 2020, 40(4), , pp.541-550 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The use of yeast assist kefir fermentation, but also can cause food spoilage if
uncontrolled. Hence, in this study, the microbial composition of an existing
commercial kefir starter was modified to produce a functional starter, where
Lactobacillus acidophilus
KCNU and
Lactobacillus
brevis
Bmb6 were used to replace yeast in the original starter to
produce non-yeast kefir-like fermented milk. The functional starter containing
L. acidophilus
KCNU and
L. brevis
Bmb6
demonstrated excellent stability with 10
10
CFU/g of total viable
cells throughout the 12 weeks low-temperature storage. The newly developed
functional starter also displayed a similar fermentation efficacy as the
yeast-containing control starter, by completing the milk fermentation within 12
h, with a comparable total number of viable cells (10
8
CFU/mL) in the
final products, as in control. Sensory evaluation revealed that the functional
starter-fermented milk highly resembled the flavor of the control kefir, with
enhanced sourness. Furthermore, oral administration of functional
starter-fermented milk significantly improved the disease activity index score
by preventing drastic weight-loss and further deterioration of disease symptoms
in DSS-induced mice. Altogether,
L. acidophilus
KCNU and
L. brevis
Bmb6 have successfully replaced yeast in a
commercial starter pack to produce a kefir-like fermented milk beverage with
additional health benefits. The outcome of this study provides an insight that
the specific role of yeast in the fermentation process could be replaced with
suitable probiotic candidates. |
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ISSN: | 2636-0772 2636-0780 |
DOI: | 10.5851/kosfa.2020.e31 |