Circular Economy and Sustainable Recovery of Taiwanese Tilapia ( Oreochromis mossambicus ) Byproduct-The Large-Scale Production of Umami-Rich Seasoning Material Application.
Chia-Hua LinYing-Tang HuangJhih-Ying CiouChiu-Min ChengGuan-Ting WangChun-Mei YouPing-Hsiu HuangChih-Yao HouPublished in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
In this study, umami-rich seasoning powder was produced from the offcuts of Taiwanese tilapia ( Oreochromis mossambicus ) by cooking concentration and spray drying of granules while yielding an abundance of glutamic acid (0.23 mg/100 g), glycine (0.10 mg/100 g), aspartic acid (0.11 mg/100 g), lysine (0.10 mg/100 g), and 11 other aminic acids. It exhibited water content (3.81%), water activity (0.3), powder yields (68.83%), and a good water solubility index (99.89%), while the particle microstructure was a spherical powder. Additionally, it received the highest overall preference score (7.53) in the consumer-type sensory evaluation compared to commercially available seasonings. This study proves that offcuts may be part of the human diet after proper processing and can be widely used to flavor savory food. The producers involved could increase their economic returns while meeting the environmental challenges. The practical contribution could create incremental value for products to critical stakeholders at each point in the tilapia supply chain with an operational guide for transitioning from inefficient to innovative circular practices.