• Title/Summary/Keyword: Miyukgook

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Sensory Evaluation of Korean Seaweed Soup, Miyukgook, with Gamma-irradiated Undaria pinnatifida (감마선 조사된 미역으로 제조한 미역국의 관능 연구)

  • Choi, Jong-il;Kim, Jae-Hun;Song, Beom-Seok;Kim, Jaekyung;Lee, Ju-Woon;Chun, Byung-Soo;Ahn, Dong-Hyun;Byun, Myung-Woo;Park, Kyung-Sook
    • Journal of Radiation Industry
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    • v.5 no.1
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    • pp.21-24
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    • 2011
  • This study was conducted to evaluated the sensory properties of Miyukgook, Korean seaweed soup, with gamma-irradiated Undaria pinnadifida for enhancing the storage of the harvested seaweed. The harvested seaweed was irradiated at the doses of 1, 3, 5, and 10 kGy. The Miyukgook was made by following the general recipe. The values of pH and acidity of the Miyukgook were not changed by the irradiation of harvested Undaria. The sensory evaluation result showed that the preference scores in all the sensory properties was a little decreased when it was irradiated, but sensory score of less than 5 kGy samples was similar in all terms. Therefore, it was considered that gamma irradiation with less than 5 kGy was effective for improvement of the storage stability of U. pinnatifida without the changes in the sensory of its major cooked food, Miyukgook.

Tocopherol and Carotenoid Contents of Selected Korean Cooked Combination Foods Consumed by Young Korean Children

  • Kim, Young-Nam;Giraud David W.;Driskell Judy A.
    • Nutritional Sciences
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    • v.9 no.4
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    • pp.323-329
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    • 2006
  • To more accurately estimate vitamin A and vitamin E intake of Koreans, food composition databases of the tocopherol and carotenoid contents of Korean foods are needed. In this study, the tocopherol $(\alpha-,\;\gamma-,\;and\;\delta-)$ and carotenoid ($\alpha-carotene,\;\beta-carotene,\;\beta-ctyptoxanthin$, lutein, and zeaxanthin) contents of 12 Korean cooked combination foods commonly consumed by children in Kwangju, Republic of Korea, were determined using reversed-phase HPLC. All samples were obtained from 3 different households in Kwangju during summer, 2005. All cooked foods in this study had detectable quantities of $\alpha-tocopherol,\;\gamma-tocopherol$ except for shoegogimugook, and $\delta-tocopherol$ except for myulchibokkeum Doejigogibokkeum had the highest $\alpha-tocopherol$ content (0.64 mg/l00 g edible portion), and $\gamma-tocopherol\;and\;\delta-tocopherol$ contents of gimbab were the highest among the foods (1.01 and 0.26 mg/l00 g edible portion). $\beta-carotene$ was found in all food samples. Gimbab had the highest contents of $\alpha-carotene,\;\beta-carotene$, and lutein among Korean cooked combination foods (158.3, 266.6, and $375.4{\mu}g/100g$ edible portion). Miyukgook contained only $\beta-carotene$ ($2.5{\mu}g/100g$ edible portion). Considerable sample-to-sample variability in tocopherol and carotenoid compositions were observed in several Korean cooked combination foods included in this study. Some of these carotenoids $(\alpha-carotene,\;\beta-carotene,\;and\;\beta-cryptoxanthin)$ are vitamin A precursors. The findings of this study may be valuable for use in Korean databases as well as nutrient consumption research for vitamin A and vitamin E.