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Saccharification and alcohol fermentation characteristics of barley malt preparations for use in organic processed food

Authors
Park, Song-YiHwang, Se-HeeLee, Jin-Hee
Issue Date
Oct-2018
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
alcohol fermentation; amylase; barley malt preparations; organic processed food; saccharification
Citation
JOURNAL OF FOOD BIOCHEMISTRY, v.42, no.5
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF FOOD BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume
42
Number
5
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/45101
DOI
10.1111/jfbc.12581
ISSN
0145-8884
1745-4514
Abstract
Organic barley malt preparations were obtained for use as food additives in organic processed food. The malt preparations containing - and -amylases and microbial preparations containing both amylases were tested for their ability to convert starch to fermentable sugars and for supplying substrates for fermentation on brown rice, waxy rice, potato, lentil, pea, wheat, and corn. Brown rice and waxy rice treated by malt preparations were significantly preferred over the other substrates (p<.05). Alcohol fermentation characteristics of saccharification preparations, obtained from malt and microbial preparations, by Saccharomyces cerevisiae bayanus (EC-1118) showed brown rice to be a preferable substrate compared with the others in case of the organic rather than the microbial ones, with an alcohol fermentation yield of 0.490.02g/g and productivity of 2.67 +/- 0.09g/L/hr (p<.05), suggesting a role of the malt preparations as new food additives in organic food applications. Amylases have various industrial applications, including food, fermentation, textile, paper, and pharmaceutical industries. This study demonstrates that microbial preparations can be replaced by organic barley malt preparations containing - and -amylases to produce alcohol by fermentation using brown rice as a fermentation substrate. The organic barley malt preparations create a new applicable uses for organic food processes as an enzyme substitute, particularly in many starch degrading enzymatic applications.
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