Enhancing synbiotic dairy beverages with chemically cross-linked inulin for improved texture and stability
Hatice Oto, H. Ceren Akal, Gökçe Eminoğlu

TL;DR
This study shows that using chemically cross-linked inulin in synbiotic dairy drinks improves texture and stability without harming probiotic bacteria.
Contribution
This is the first study to evaluate chemically cross-linked inulin in synbiotic dairy beverages.
Findings
Cross-linked inulin increased viscosity and water-holding capacity without altering composition or probiotic viability.
Probiotic bacteria remained viable above 10⁶ CFU/mL during storage.
Cross-linked inulin influenced antioxidant capacity but not total phenolic content.
Abstract
In this study synbiotic dairy beverages containing chemically cross-linked inulin (using sodium hexametaphosphate-SHMP) and three probiotic bacteria strains (Lactobacillus (Lb.) acidophilus, Lacticaseibacillus (Lcb.) rhamnosus, and Lcb. paraparacasei) were examined during 30 days of storage. The samples were compared with control samples produced using natural inulin and the effects of cross-linked inulin on the composition, acidity, microbiological, physical (colour, water holding capacity, rheology), electrophoretic profile (SDS-PAGE), total phenolic content, antioxidant capacity and sensory (appearance, structure, flavour) properties of the synbiotic dairy beverages were determined. This study demonstrated that cross-linked inulin enhanced viscosity and water-holding capacity resulting in a more stable and thicker product without significantly altering the compositional properties or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrobial Metabolites in Food Biotechnology · Food composition and properties · Probiotics and Fermented Foods
