Effects of processing and composition on the crystallization and mechanical properties of water-in-oil emulsions
Article
-
- Overview
-
- Research
-
- Identity
-
- Additional Document Info
-
- View All
-
Overview
abstract
-
This research investigated the role of agitation, high-melting emulsifier and water content on the crystallization process and the texture of water-in-oil emulsions produced on a pilot plant scale using a scraped surface heat exchanger (SSHE). Our results indicated that shear affected the hardness of the emulsions as they exited the SSHE, with softer emulsions processed at higher shear; once the emulsions reached equilibrium temperature, no differences in texture due to shear were observed. The added emulsifier delayed the crystallization of emulsions processed in the SSHE with no further effect on the equilibrium solid fat content (SFC) or textural properties of emulsions after 24 h of storage. The texture of the crystallized emulsions at early stages of processing was influenced by the amount of water and water droplet size; the larger the amount of water and the smaller the droplets, the higher the hardness of emulsions. Once the emulsions reached equilibrium temperature, further crystallization took place, and the texture depended only on the SFC. © 2013 AOCS.
publication date
funding provided via
published in
Research
keywords
-
Lipid crystallization; Scraped surface heat exchanger; Texture; Water-in-oil emulsions Crystallization process; Equilibrium temperatures; Lipid crystallization; Scraped surface heat exchangers; Solid fat content; Textural properties; Water droplet size; Water in oil emulsions; Drops; Emulsification; Hardness; Heat exchangers; Pilot plants; Textures; Emulsions
Identity
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Additional Document Info
start page
end page
volume
issue