Understanding animal-based flavor generation, mechanisms and characterization: Cheddar cheese and bacon flavors.
Jieying LiYounas DadmohammadiAlireza AbbaspouradPublished in: Critical reviews in food science and nutrition (2023)
Natural animal-based flavors have great appeal to consumers and have broad applications in the food industry. In this review, we summarized findings related to bacon and Cheddar cheese flavors' components and their precursors, reaction mechanisms, influential factors, and characterization methods. The results show that free sugars, free amino acids, peptides, vitamins, lipids, and nitrites are precursors to bacon flavor. The conditions governing the formation of bacon flavor are thermally dependent, which facilitates the use of thermal food processing to generate such a flavor. For Cheddar cheese flavor, milk ingredients such as lactose, citrate, fat, and casein are reported as precursors. The optimum conditions to generate Cheddar cheese flavor from precursors are quite strict, which limits its application in food processing. As an alternative, it is more practical to generate Cheddar cheese flavor by combining key aroma compounds using thermal food processing. This review provides the food industry the comprehensive information about the generation of bacon and Cheddar cheese flavors using precursor molecules.