Earthy off-odour in farm-raised freshwater fish is considered a quality defect. This study aimed to investigate the potential of pH-shift processing to remove off-odours from farm-raised hybrid catfish while at… Click to show full abstract
Earthy off-odour in farm-raised freshwater fish is considered a quality defect. This study aimed to investigate the potential of pH-shift processing to remove off-odours from farm-raised hybrid catfish while at the same time documenting de-novo formation of other volatile compounds. In comparison with crude mince and conventional surimi, the alkali pH-shift process gave larger reductions in geosmin, 2-methylisoborneol, undesirable volatile compounds (e.g. hexanal, (E)-2-nonenal, (E)-2-heptenal, 2-butanone, and hexadecane), lipids, myoglobin, total volatile basic nitrogen, and TCA-soluble peptides (p < 0.05). The acid-produced protein isolate showed the highest TBARS and processing-induced evolution of the following volatiles: octanal, nonanal, decanal, 2-butyl-2-octenal, pentadecanal, 1-hexanol, 1-octanol, 1-octen-3-ol, and 2,3-octanediol (p < 0.05). Alkali-aided process provided better overall gelling characteristics (i.e. breaking force, deformation, and texture profile) and gave lower fishy, earthy, and rancid off-odour scores (p < 0.05). Thus, alkali pH-shift process can be used to isolate gel-forming proteins from hybrid catfish while minimizing the accumulation of undesirable volatile compounds.
               
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