Microencapsulation of canola oil by lentil protein isolate-based wall materials
•A lentil protein isolate-maltodextrin-alginate wall entrapped oil.•Wall material provided protection against oxidation.•A bi-layer wall material was formed around the oil droplets. The overall goal was to encapsulate canola oil using a mixture of lentil protein isolate and maltodextrin with/without...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Food chemistry 2016-12, Vol.212, p.264-273 |
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Hauptverfasser: | , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •A lentil protein isolate-maltodextrin-alginate wall entrapped oil.•Wall material provided protection against oxidation.•A bi-layer wall material was formed around the oil droplets.
The overall goal was to encapsulate canola oil using a mixture of lentil protein isolate and maltodextrin with/without lecithin and/or sodium alginate by spray drying. Initially, emulsion and microcapsule properties as a function of oil (20%–30%), protein (2%–8%) and maltodextrin concentration (9.5%–18%) were characterized by emulsion stability, droplet size, viscosity, surface oil and entrapment efficiency. Microcapsules with 20% oil, 2% protein and 18% maltodextrin were shown to have the highest entrapment efficiency, and selected for further re-design using different preparation conditions and wall ingredients (lentil protein isolate, maltodextrin, lecithin and/or sodium alginate). The combination of the lentil protein, maltodextrin and sodium alginate represented the best wall material to produce microcapsules with the highest entrapment efficiency (∼88%). The lentil protein-maltodextrin-alginate microcapsules showed better oxidative stability and had a stronger wall structure than the lentil protein-maltodextrin microcapsules. |
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ISSN: | 0308-8146 1873-7072 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.foodchem.2016.05.136 |