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Insight into the Gel Properties of Antarctic Krill and Pacific White Shrimp Surimi Gels and the Feasibility of Polysaccharides as Texture Enhancers of Antarctic Krill Surimi Gels.

Shuang LiSongyi LinPeng-Fei JiangZhijie BaoSibo LiNa Sun
Published in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Antarctic krill is a potential and attractive resource for consumption. However, most Antarctic krill meat is used to produce primary products with low commercial value, with few highly processed products. This study aimed to evaluate and improve the gelling properties of Antarctic krill surimi, with Pacific white shrimp surimi as control. Compared with Pacific white shrimp surimi, the lower β-sheet content and protein aggregation degree had a severe impact on the formation of the gel network of Antarctic krill surimi, which resulted in weaker breaking force, gel strength, and viscoelasticity ( p < 0.05). Moreover, water retention capacity and molecular forces had a positive effect on the stability of the gel matrix of shrimp surimi. Thus, the high α-helix/β-sheet ratio, weak intermolecular interactions, and low level of protein network cross-linkage were the main reasons for the poor quality of Antarctic krill surimi. On this basis, the effects of six polysaccharides on the texture properties of Antarctic krill surimi were studied. Chitosan, konjac glucomannan, sodium carboxyl methyl cellulose, and waxy maize starch resulted in no significant improvement in the texture properties of Antarctic krill surimi ( p > 0.05). However, the addition of ι-carrageenan (2%) or κ-carrageenan (1~2%) is an effective way to improve the texture properties of Antarctic krill surimi ( p < 0.05). These findings will contribute to the development of reconstituted Antarctic krill surimi products with high nutritional quality and the promotion of deep-processing products of Antarctic krill meat.
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