Article

유산균주의 종류에 따른 통보릿가루 첨가 요구르트의 품질 특성

이미자1, 김경순1, 김형순2,*
Mi-Ja Lee1, Kyung-Soon Kim1, Hyung-Soon Kim2,*
Author Information & Copyright
1농촌진흥청 국립식량과학원
2서남대학교 환경화학공학과
1National Institute of Crop Science, Rural Development Administration
2Department of Environmental & Chemical Engineering, Seonam University
*Corresponding author: Hyung-Soon Kim, Department of Environmental & Chemical Engineering, Seonam University, Namwon 590-711, Korea, Tel: +82-63-620-0229; Fax: +82-63-620-0210, E-mail: 63ajoong@hanmail.net

ⓒ Copyright 2013 Korean Society for Food Engineering. This is an Open-Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Received: Sep 05, 2013; Revised: Oct 21, 2013; Accepted: Oct 28, 2013

Published Online: Nov 30, 2013

Abatract

The objective of this experiment was to select the best strain of lactic acid bacteria for the manufacture of yogurt with 3% whole barley flour. Yogurt was fermented with various lactic acid bacteria, Lactobacillus acidophilus (LA), Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. Bulgaricus (LB), and Streptococcus thermophilussei (ST), and quality properties, β-glucan content, and antioxidant activity were estimated. The quality of the control yogurt and that containing barley flour showed significant differences according to the type of lactic acid bacteria strain. Barley yogurt that was fermented with LALBST complex bacteria had low pH, high titratable acidity and brix. Also, its viable cell count, the value of L, and antioxidant activity were high, and the value of a and b were low. The β-glucan content of barley yogurt containing 3% whole barley flour was 0.15%. The pH of yogurt decreased with the addition of barley flour. Titratable acidity, brix, β-glucan content, and the antioxidant activity of yogurt fermented with barley flour increased. Viscosity also increased significantly with the addition of barley flour. Yogurt qualities such as pH, titratable acidity, and viscosity were developed by the addition of barley flour. From these results, the best strain of lactic acid bacteria for fermenting yogurt containing barley flour was the LALBST complex.

Keywords: yogurt; lactic acid bacteria; whole barley flour; viable cell count; β-glucan