• Title/Summary/Keyword: Fish odor

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Processing Conditions and Quality Stability during Storage of Frozen-dried Filefish (말쥐치 동건품의 가공조건 및 저장중의 품질변화)

  • LEE Eung-Ho;KIM Hee-Yun
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.111-116
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    • 1982
  • For the effective utilization of the fish resources in coastal regions, investigations on processing conditions of frozen-dried product, quality stability of the Product during storage, and utilization as a food material were carried out with the filefish, Navoden modestus. The processing condition was determined with the moisture content and texture of the product. The duality of the product was evaluated on chemical composition, rehydration capacity, TBA value, browning, omission test and sensory score. The conditions for the processing of frozen-dried filefish under the conditions of freezing temperature at $-10^{\circ}C$ and forced air thawing at $56{\pm}2^{\circ}C$ with a velocity of 1 m/sec were as follows : freezing temperature, $-10^{\circ}C$ : freezing time, 10 hours; thawing time, 2 hours ; and repeated number of freezing and thawing, 5 times. The yield, the condition of moisture and protein were $10.2\%,\;23.6\%\;and\;70.6\%$, respectively. The frozen-dried product packed with air and stored at room temperature showed no remarkable changes in TBA value, rehydration capacity, browning during the storage period of 90days. The frozen-dried filefish showed no remarkable differences in the taste, odor and texture, comparing with frozen-dried Alaska pollack on the market.

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Enterobacter aerogenes ZDY01 Attenuates Choline-Induced Trimethylamine N-Oxide Levels by Remodeling Gut Microbiota in Mice

  • Qiu, Liang;Yang, Dong;Tao, Xueying;Yu, Jun;Xiong, Hua;Wei, Hua
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.27 no.8
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    • pp.1491-1499
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    • 2017
  • Trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), which is transformed from trimethylamine (TMA) through hepatic flavin-containing monooxygenases, can promote atherosclerosis. TMA is produced from dietary carnitine, phosphatidylcholine, and choline via the gut microbes. Previous works have shown that some small molecules, such as allicin, resveratrol, and 3,3-dimethyl-1-butanol, are used to reduce circulating TMAO levels. However, the use of bacteria as an effective therapy to reduce TMAO levels has not been reported. In the present study, 82 isolates were screened from healthy Chinese fecal samples on a basal salt medium supplemented with TMA as the sole carbon source. The isolates belonged to the family Enterobacteriaceae, particularly to genera Klebsiella, Escherichia, Cronobacter, and Enterobacter. Serum TMAO and cecal TMA levels were significantly decreased in choline-fed mice treated with Enterobacter aerogenes ZDY01 compared with those in choline-fed mice treated with phosphate-buffered saline. The proportions of Bacteroidales family S24-7 were significantly increased, whereas the proportions of Helicobacteraceae and Prevotellaceae were significantly decreased through the administration of E. aerogenes ZDY01. Results indicated that the use of probiotics to act directly on the TMA in the gut might be an alternative approach to reduce serum TMAO levels and to prevent the development of atherosclerosis and "fish odor syndrome" through the effect of TMA on the gut microbiota.

Quality Characteristics of Starry Flounder Platichthys stellatus Meat Reared in Different Salinity (저염분 해수사육 강도다리 Platichthys stellatus의 체성분 특성)

  • Lim, Han-Kyu;Kim, Young-Soo;Son, Maeng-Hyun;Kim, Kyoung-Duck;Jeong, Min-Hwan;Chang, Young-Jin
    • Journal of Fisheries and Marine Sciences Education
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    • v.24 no.2
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    • pp.324-332
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    • 2012
  • This study was performed to evaluate the food value of starry flounder Platichthys stellatus reared in different salinity. Results of salinity experiment in starry flounder clearly showed that there were no significant difference among cohesiveness and hardness except springiness. Proximate composition of muscle, crude lipid at the salinity 0 psu was significantly higher than those 15 psu and 33 psu, but there was no significant difference in terms of crude protein, moisture and ash. While variations in some amino acid composition, serine and threonine contents were observed among fishes reared in different salinity of water, but no significant difference among the other amino acid contents. Muscle fatty acid composition showed significant difference among C16:0, C16:1n-7, C20:1n-9, C22:5n-3 and C24:0. Results of a sensory evaluation clearly indicated that there were no significant difference in odor and color of fish muscle reared in different salinity. But taste, texture and overall acceptability showed the lowest values in 0 psu.

Comparison on the Food Quality Characteristics of Muscles from Salmonids according to Species, Imported Country, and Separated Part (연어류 근육의 종류, 수입국 및 부위별 식품학적 품질 특성 비교)

  • Heu, Min Soo;Choi, Byeong Dae;Kim, Ki Hyun;Kang, Sang In;Kim, Yong Jung;Kim, Jin-Soo
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.48 no.1
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    • pp.16-25
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    • 2015
  • This study compared the food quality of salmonid fishes according to the species, country of origin, and separated part, such as fillet and frame. The proximate composition of chum salmon from Norway (CS-N) was 74.4% moisture, 19.5% crude protein, 4.2% crude lipid, and 1.2% ash. These values were within roughly 1% for the other salmon species. There was no significant difference (at P<0.05) in the Hunter a value of salmon muscle according to sepatated parts. However, there was a significant difference (P<0.05) in Hunter a value of salmon muscle according to the species and country of origin. There were significant differences in odor intensity and hardness of the salmon according to the species. The major free amino acid in all of the salmon muscles was anserine, which ranged from 61.3 to 73.0%. The taste value was the highest for salmon imported from Alaska (CS-A), followed by pink salmon, CS-N, and muscle separated from the frame (AS-C). In the taste value of all salmon muscles, the major amino acid was glutamic acid. The total amino acid content of salmon muscles ranged from 18.36 to 19.64 g/100 g, and the major amino acids were glutamic acid and aspartic acid. There were differences in the mineral contents, including Ca, P, K, and Fe, and fatty acid composition of salmon muscle according to species.

Physico-Chemical and Sensory Properties of Commercial Korean Traditional Soy Sauce of Mass-Produced vs. Small Scale Farm Produced in the Gyeonggi Area (한식 간장의 이화학 및 관능적 특성 - 대기업 시판 제품과 경기지역 소규모 농가 생산 제품의 비교 -)

  • Choi, Nam-Soon;Chung, Seo-Jin;Choi, Ji-Yeon;Kim, Hye-Won;Cho, Jung-Joo
    • The Korean Journal of Food And Nutrition
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    • v.26 no.3
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    • pp.553-564
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    • 2013
  • The core ingredient of traditional Korean style soy sauce is soy bean without any wheat or rice incorporated. National brands as well as regional micro-brewed companies constitute the soy sauce market in Korea. The present study investigated the physico-chemical and sensory properties of soy sauces produced by small-scale or mass-production. Additionally, the key physico-chemical parameters sufficiently representing the critical sensory characteristics have been identified. Ten types of soy sauce brewed by the Korean traditional method were selected for the study. Among these samples, seven types were brewed in small-scales in the Gyeonggi-do region whereas the other 3 types were mass-production products of major national brands. The total solid, reducing sugar, salinity, sugar content, amino nitrogen, CIELAB, acidity, and pH of soy sauce samples were measured for the physico-chemical analysis. A generic descriptive analysis was conducted to analyze the sensory characteristics of the samples using six trained panelists. The descriptive panel developed 21 sensory attributes. The data were statistically analyzed using ANOVA, PCA and PLSR. Overall, the micro-brewed products showed significantly higher value of salinity and acidity but lower content of reducing sugar than the mass-production products. The micro-brewed soy sauces elicited stronger fermented flavor, sourness, and bitterness whereas the national brand products elicited stronger alcoholic odor, sweetness and umami taste. Sugar content, acidity, and amino nitrogen showed strong relationships with fish sauce flavor, umami taste, and rich flavor. Salinity was closely related to the overall flavor intensity.

Processings and Quality Characteristics of the Oyster Crassostrea gigas Granular Flavor Seasoning from IQF Oyster Extract (개체동결 굴(Crassostrea gigas) 엑스분을 이용한 굴 풍미계 과립조미료의 제조 및 품질특성)

  • Hwang, Seok-Min;Cho, Jun-Hyun;Kim, Sang-Hyun;Lee, In-Seok;Oh, Kwang-Soo
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.49 no.6
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    • pp.766-771
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    • 2016
  • The pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas has a desirable taste and flavor that differs from those of other fish and shellfish. In order to develop a high value-added product from individually quick-frozen oyster extract (IQFOE), we prepared an oyster granular flavor seasoning (OGS) from IQFOE and characterized its qualities. The OGS was prepared by granular molding and fluidized bed drying with inosine monophosphate (IMP, 0.1%), yeast extract powder (1.4%), tangle extract powder (0.6%), monosodium glutamate (MSG, 5.0%), microcrystalline cellulose (0.6%), lactose (27.5%), salt (33.0%), spray-dried IQFOE (22.5%) as a powdered materials, and IQFOE ($Brix\;25^{\circ}$, 7.0%), soy sauce (0.4%) and water (1.7%) as a liquid materials. The moisture, crude protein, pH and salinity of the OGS were 3.4%, 12.5%, 6.50 and 32.0%, respectively. Especially, the OGS revealed very higher amino-N content (1,856.0 mg/100 g) than that (1,291.2-1,610.2 mg/100 g) of other commercial flavor seasonings. In taste-active compounds, free amino acid contents was 1,359.0 mg/100 g, and major ones were glutamic acid, taurine, hydroxyproline, glycine, lysine, phosphoserine, proline in order. And OGS showed good organoleptic qualities for taste, odor and general preference compared with commercial flavor seasonings on a local market.

Effect of Crab Shell on Shelf-life Enhancement of Kimchi (게껍질의 김치보존성 향상효과)

  • 김순동;김미향;김일두
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
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    • v.25 no.6
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    • pp.907-914
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    • 1996
  • To enhance the shelf-life and quality of baechu kimchi, the effects of CSP(crab shell powder) addition to kimchi was investigated. Overall qualities were deteriorated by fish odor, chewiness of particles, sharp pH increase at the early fermentation stage; therefore in order to solve these problems kimchi fermentation was carried out with kimchi containing 1, 3, 5% CSPB for salted baech weight at $10^{\circ}C$ for 300ays. Quality of kimchi was evalutated by the measurement of pH, acidity, colour L, a, and b value, the number of microbe and lactic acid bacteria, texture. Ten highly trained panelists were involved in the sensory evaluation. During the entire fermentation periods, pH, hardness, colour L, a and b value, the number of lactic acid bacteria of kimchi with CSPB were higher than those of control, but acidity was lower. Sensory quality showed that sour taste of control at 15-day fermentation was already strong. However, sour taste, crispness taste, and overall taste of kimchi with CSPB untill 20-day fermentation were good. Especially, overall taste of kimchi containing 3% CSPB at 30-day fermentation was good, but that of kimchi containing 5% showed fish odor from the early periods of fermentation.

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Processing and Taste Compounds of the Fish Sauce from Skipjack Scrap (가다랑어잔사를 이용한 어간장 제조 및 대미성분)

  • LEE Eung-Ho;LEE Tae-Hun;KIM Jin-Soo;AHN Chang-Bum
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.25-35
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    • 1989
  • To prepare a new type of fish sauce from skipjack scrap, it was examined the effect of koji on the sauce flavor, conditions of low salt fish sauce processing and the changes of taste com-pounds during its fermentation. To prepare the skipjack scrap sauce, chopped skipjack head paste was mixed with $6.6\%$ skipjack viscera, $26.9\%$ koji, $71\%$ of $25\%$ brine, $13.3\%$ salt and $7.6\%$ glucose, and fermented at $25\pm4^{\circ}C$ for 90 days. The same process was also carried out to prepare the low salt skipjack scrap sauce adding $7.6\%$ sorbitol, $0.3\%$ lactic acid and $9.8\%$ ethyl alcohol instead of $13.3\%$ salt. The major free amino acids in the products were glutamic acid, Iysine, valine, phenylalanine, alanine, leucine and isoleucine at 90 days of fermentation. And the contents of total free amino acids in both products were 3,307mg/00m1, 3,637.1mg/100m1 at 90 days of fermentation. The predominating non-volatile organic acids showed in the products were lactic acid, succinic acid, pyroglutamic acid, which were $90\%$ over contents of the total non-volatile organic acids. Total non-volatile organic acid contents in both products were 1,002.1mg/100ml, 1,312.9mg/100m1 at 90 days of fermentation. During fermentation of sauce, ADP, AMP and IMP were decreased, while inosine and hypoxanthine were increased. The major taste compounds of the products were rove진ed free amino acids and non-volatile organic acids. The nucleotides and their related compounds, total creatinine, betaine, TAMO and sugar were seemed to be having an auxiliary role in taste of those products. Fishy odor in skipjack scrap sauce can be improved by adding koji. And the low salt skipjack scrap sauce ($9.12\%$ of salt contents) can be prepared by the replacement of a part of salt with sorbitol, lactic acid and ethyl alcohol. From the results of sensory evaluation and chemical experiments, the skipjack scrap sauce products supposed to be at least equal to the sold soy sauce on the market in quality.

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Quality Characteristics of Citron Treated Mackerel Oil and Fillet during Refrigerated Storage (유자액 처리에 의한 고등어유와 필렛의 냉장 저장중 품질 특성)

  • Jung, Bok-Mi;Chung, Gyu-Hwa;Jang, Mi-Soon;Shin, Suk-U
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.36 no.4
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    • pp.574-579
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    • 2004
  • Quality characteristics of citron-treated mackerel oil and fillet during refrigerated storage were evaluated. Citron-treated and non-treated mackerel oil and fillet were estimated by periodical measurements of acid, peroxide, carbonyl, volatile basic nitrogen, trimethylamine-N, and thiobarbituric acid values. Volatile basic nitrogen and trimethylarnine-N values in mackerel fillet treated with citron for 25 days during refrigerated storage were significantly lower than those of citron non-treated mackerel fillet, with those of boiled citron water-treat group significantly decreasing compared to 1 and 2% citron extract groups. Acid, peroxide, carbonyl, and thiobarbituric acid values of citron-treated mackerel oil were significantly lower than those of citron non-treated mackerel oil throughout storage period. Overall acceptability of salted mackerel fillets treated with boiled citron water and 1% citron extract was significantly than those of control and 2% citron extract. Results indicate application of citron juice on mackerel surface may be useful to lower rancidity degree and fish odor during refrigerated storage.

Processing Optimization of Seasoned Laver Pyropia yezoensis Using Seasoning Sauce with Conger Eel Conger myriaster (붕장어(Conger myriaster) 시즈닝을 활용한 조미김(Pyropia yezoensis)의 제조공정 최적화)

  • Kim, Do Youb;Kang, Sang In;Lee, Chang Young;Kim, Hye Jin;Lee, Jung Suck;Heu, Min Soo;Kim, Jin-Soo
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.53 no.3
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    • pp.368-381
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    • 2020
  • This study was conducted to optimize the processing conditions of seasoned laver Pyropia yezoensis with conger eel Conger myriaster seasoning sauce (CES) using response surface methodology (RSM). The RSM program results for bonesoftness showed that the optimum independent variables based on the dependent variables (Y1, lipid removal rate; Y2, texture; and Y3, sensory fish odor score) were 431.0% for X1 (water amount), 115.6℃ for X2 (retort-operated temperature), and 50.1 min for X3 (retort-operated time). The RSM program results for the CES blend showed that the optimum independent variables (X1, amount of bone-softened conger eel by-products; X2, mixed sauce amount; and X3, starch amount) based on the dependent variables (Y1, amino-N; Y2, Hunter redness; and Y3, drying time) were 44.8% for A (pre-treated conger eel by-product), 36.0% for B (mixed sauce), and 19.2% for C (starch). The RSM program results for seasoned laver with CES showed that the optimum independent variables based on the dependent variables (Y1, water activity; Y2, Hunter yellowness; and Y3, overall acceptance) were 5.0% for X1, (CES amount), 313.8℃ for X2 (roasting temperature), and 6.0 s for X3 (roasting time). The seasoned laver with CES prepared under the optimum conditions was superior to commercial seasoned laver in terms of overall acceptance.