Buch, Englisch, 586 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 780 g
Improving Quality, Technologies and Health Benefits
Buch, Englisch, 586 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 780 g
ISBN: 978-0-08-101430-1
Verlag: Elsevier Science & Technology
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
- Related titles
- List of contributors
- Woodhead Publishing Series in Food Science, Technology and Nutrition
- Part One. Fermented foods and health - 1. Probiotic fermented foods and health promotion - 1.1. Introduction
- 1.2. Probiotic fermented foods and health promotion
- 1.3. Health benefits deriving from the consumption of probiotics
- 1.4. Gastrointestinal health
- 1.5. Immune health
- 1.6. Metabolic health
- 1.7. Summary
- 1.8. Future trends
- 1.9. Sources of further information and advice
- 2. Exopolysaccharides from fermented dairy products and health promotion - 2.1. Introduction
- 2.2. Exopolysaccharides (EPSs) from fermented dairy products
- 2.3. Interaction with the human intestinal microbiome
- 2.4. Interaction with the immune system
- 2.5. Interaction with enteric pathogens and toxins
- 2.6. Diverse interactions and potential health benefits
- 2.7. Conclusions
- 3. Bioactive peptides from fermented foods and health promotion - 3.1. Introduction
- 3.2. Release of bioactive peptides during microbial fermentation
- 3.3. Bioactive peptides in fermented dairy and soy products
- 3.4. Bioactive peptides in health promotion
- 3.5. Conclusions and future trends
- 4. Conjugated linoleic acid production in fermented foods - 4.1. Introduction
- 4.2. Basic knowledge of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA)
- 4.3. CLA content of unprocessed food ingredients
- 4.4. Factors influencing the CLA content of raw materials, and the effect of animal diet on CLA content of milk and meat
- 4.5. CLA content of fermented food products
- 4.6. Health effects of CLA
- 4.7. Future trends
- 5. Effect of fermentation on the phytochemical contents and antioxidant properties of plant foods - 5.1. Introduction
- 5.2. Effect of fermentation on phytochemical profiles of plant foods and the bioavailability of nutrients
- 5.3. Effect of fermentation on antioxidant properties of plant foods
- 5.4. Health-promoting effects of fermented plant foods: a case of phytochemical and antioxidant property changes
- 5.5. Conclusions
- 6. Traditional cereal fermented foods as sources of functional microorganisms - 6.1. Introduction
- 6.2. Food fermentation processes
- 6.3. Antimicrobial proteins isolated from boza-related lactic acid bacteria
- 6.4. Fermented cereal-based food from Africa and Latin America
- 6.5. Starter cultures and cereal-based fermented food
- 6.6. Cereal-based probiotic foods
- Part Two. Fermentation microbiology - 7. Advanced methods for the identification, enumeration, and characterization of microorganisms in fermented foods - 7.1. The fermented food microbial ecosystem
- 7.2. Culture-dependent methods
- 7.3. Culture-independent methods: diversity in microbial communities
- 7.4. Culture-independent methods: metabolic activity in microbial communities
- 7.5. Recent insights: pyrosequencing
- 7.6. Conclusions
- 8. Systems biology and metabolic engineering of lactic acid bacteria for improved fermented foods - 8.1. Introduction
- 8.2. Metabolic engineering in industrial lactic acid bacteria (LAB)
- 8.3. Systems biology and metabolic engineering in LAB
- 8.4. Conclusions
- 8.5. Sources of further information and advice
- 9. Designing wine yeast for the future - 9.1. Introduction
- 9.2. Accidental beginnings and ancient wisdom
- 9.3. Turning hindsight into foresight
- 9.4. The ancient art of winemaking meets frontier yeast science
- 9.5. Engineering yeast to make better wine
- 9.6. Future trends
- 10. Modern approaches for isolation, selection, and improvement of bacterial strains for fermentation applications - 10.1. Introduction
- 10.2. Screening of strain collections
- 10.3. Classical strain improvement
- 10.4. Future trends
- 10.5. Sources of further information and advice
- 11. Advances in starter culture technology: focus on drying processes - 11.1. Introduction
- 11.2. Protective agents
- 11.3. Starter culture fermentation process
- 11.4. Freeze drying for the production of dried starter cultures
- 11.5. Spray drying for the production of dried starter cultures
- 11.6. Vacuum drying for the production of dried starter cultures
- 11.7. Product characteristics and storage stability
- 11.8. Conclusion
- Part Three. Quality and safety of fermented foods - 12. Controlling the formation of biogenic amines in fermented foods - 12.1. Introduction
- 12.2. Molecular determinants of biogenic amine formation
- 12.3. Environmental factors involved in the production of biogenic amines
- 12.4. Techniques for the detection of biogenic amine-producing bacteria
- 12.5. Techniques for the detection of biogenic amines
- 12.6. Future trends
- 12.7. Legislation concerning biogenic amine content in food
- 12.8. Sources of further information and advice
- 13. Biopreservation effects in fermented foods - 13.1. Preservation and biopreservation
- 13.2. Biopreservative effect of lactic and acetic acids
- 13.3. Biopreservative effect of phenyllactic acid
- 13.4. Biopreservative effect of diacetyl
- 13.5. Biopreservative effect of cyclic dipeptides (2,5-diketopiperazines)
- 13.6. Biopreservative effect of bacteriocins
- 13.7. Biopreservative effect of other compounds
- 13.8. Conclusions
- 14. Lactic acid bacteria as antifungal agents - 14.1. Introduction
- 14.2. Natural antifungal compounds produced by lactic acid bacteria
- 14.3. Factors affecting production of antifungal compounds by lactic acid bacteria
- 14.4. Potential applications of lactic acid bacteria as antifungal compounds
- 14.5. Lactic acid bacteria and mycotoxins
- Part Four. Particular products, and approaches towards quality improvement and fermentation control - 15. Quality improvement and fermentation control in meat products - 15.1. Introduction
- 15.2. Types of fermented meats
- 15.3. Principles of manufacture of fermented meats
- 15.4. Microbiological and chemical changes during meat fermentation
- 15.5. Starter cultures
- 15.6. Microbiological safety
- 15.7. Recent and future trends
- 15.8. Sources of further information and advice
- 16. Quality improvement and fermentation control in fish products - 16.1. Introduction
- 16.2. Salted and fermented fish products
- 16.3. Narezushi
- 16.4. Functionality of lactic-acid fermented fish foods
- 17. Quality improvement and fermentation control in dough fermentations - 17.1. Introduction
- 17.2. Advances in understanding of microbiota and physiology
- 17.3. Physiology and its impact on bread quality
- 17.4. Developments in use of starter cultures
- 17.5. Quality and safety issues
- 17.6. Health benefits
- 17.7. Future trends
- 18. Quality, safety, biofunctionality and fermentation control in soya - 18.1. Introduction
- 18.2. Fermented soya products
- 18.3. Quality and food safety aspects
- 18.4. Biofunctionality and health aspects
- 18.5. Future trends and research needs
- 18.6. Sources of further information and advice
- 19. The microbial dynamics of wine fermentation - 19.1. Introduction
- 19.2. Overview of the winemaking process: from vineyard to bottle
- 19.3. Pre-fermentation microbiota
- 19.4. Fermentation microbiota
- 19.5. Post-fermentation microbiota
- 19.6. Methods of diversity assessment
- 19.7. Factors impacting the presence and persistence of microbes
- 19.8. Dynamics of yeast during the primary fermentation phase
- 19.9. Advances in understanding yeast fermentation physiology
- 19.10. Future trends
- 19.11. Sources of further information and advice
- 20. Quality improvement and fermentation control in beer - 20.1. Introduction
- 20.2. Genetic improvement of brewer's yeast
- 20.3. Anaerobic beer contaminants
- 20.4. New trends in fermentation
- 20.5. New products: finding profitable niches
- 20.6. Beer in relation to nutrition and health
- 20.7. Future trends
- 21. Coffee: fermentation and microbiota - 21.1. Introduction
- 21.2. Coffee processing
- 21.3. The microbiology of coffee fermentation
- 21.4. Towards the use of starter cultures to optimize fermentation
- 21.5. Mycotoxin production
- 21.6. Conclusion
- 22. Quality improvement and fermentation control in vegetables - 22.1. Introduction
- 22.2. History and present product range
- 22.3. Food fermentations: complex networks
- 22.4. Technological factors
- 22.5. Ingredients and additives
- 22.6. Microbiology of fermentation
- 22.7. Faulty products and spoilage
- 22.8. Kimchi
- 22.9. Future trends
- Index