Microwave Pretreatment of Soybeans Prior to Soaking Enhances Mechanical and Rehydration Properties of Yuba
Weiyu Li, Siyu Zhan, Ke Sun, Chunli Song, Jian Ren

TL;DR
Microwaving soybeans before soaking improves the texture and rehydration of yuba, a soy-based food product.
Contribution
This study reveals how microwave pretreatment reorganizes soybean proteins and lipids to enhance yuba quality.
Findings
Microwave pretreatment for 90 seconds increased yuba's elongation at break by 126.36%.
Microwave treatment improved yuba's rehydration capacity and color attributes like lightness and yellowness.
Protein reorganization via disulfide bonds was identified as a key mechanism behind the improved yuba structure.
Abstract
Microwave pretreatment of native soybeans in the preparation of yuba remains underexplored, and the impact of this treatment on the resulting yuba quality is still unclear. In this study, soybeans were subjected to microwave pretreatment for 30–120 s before conventional soaking. CLSM revealed soybean microstructural changes, including cell-wall degradation and improved dispersion of proteins and lipids. FTIR and SDS-PAGE results of yuba indicated that hydrogen bond cleavage and the formation of new cross-links reduced protein coiling and polar group exposure, while stabilizing aliphatic chains, ultimately yielding a stronger and more compact yuba network structure. Mechanical and rehydration results further indicated that microwave treatment positively affected yuba quality. The 90 s pretreatment was identified as the optimal condition, exhibiting the highest elongation at break…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProteins in Food Systems · Food composition and properties · Food Drying and Modeling
