fermented vegetables Flashcards

1
Q

what are the cell populations on raw vegetables?

A

10^4-10^6 CFU/g

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2
Q

to begin which organisms are most populous

A

mesophilic organisms (LAB is present later)

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3
Q

spoilage of vegetable fermentations

A
  • occurs when the brine is no longer present
  • Spoilage bacteria result in the deterioration of the vegetable material due to the elaborate destructive enzymes produced (proteases, lipases, amylases, nucleases, etc.)
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4
Q

general fermentation process

A
  • organic acids diffuse into the brine
  • results in lower pH
  • As the vegetable cells die, sugars diffuse into the brine resulting in the rapid growth of LAB
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5
Q

are bacteriophages a problem in vf?

A

NO because vf do not typically use a starter culture

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6
Q

Leuconostoc mesenteroides

A
  • important in the initiation of the fermentation of several vegetables
  • grows more rapidly than other LAB over a range of temperatures (5-35C) and brine concentrations (0-5%)
  • heterolactic fermentation of vegetable sugars, typically sucrose, fructose, and glucose and produces carbon dioxide and acids (lactic and acetic) (The carbon dioxide replaces air and provides the anaerobic conditions favorable for the stabilization of ascorbic acid and the natural color of the vegetables)
  • will grow until an acidity level of 1.5-2.0% is achieved
  • does not grow in temperatures above 22C
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7
Q

Lactobacillus plantarum

A
  • homofermentative LAB
  • can survive the elevating lactic acid levels
  • In most vegetable fermentations Lb. plantarum will outcompete other LAB
  • 2% acidity and above
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8
Q

Lactobacillus brevis

A

Will continue fermenting after L. plantarum until an acidity level of 2.5-3% is obtained, and there is no sugar left vegetables

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9
Q

what is the microorganism cascade general

A

Leuconostoc mesenteroides, lactobacillus plantarum, lactobacillus brevis

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10
Q

in the first 24 h for sauerkraut which compounds are formed?

A

CO2, lactic acid (lesser acetic acid)

cuz it starts with heterofermentative

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11
Q

optimum temperature for sauerkraut

A

18-22C - optimal
Below 7.5C fermentation time can be up to 6 month, flavor good
18-22C fermentation time is ~20 days, optimal flavor
32-36C fermentation time is 10 days, flavor is poor

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12
Q

why is salt added to sauerkraut?

A

to extract juice from the plant, making sugar and nutrients more available
to reduce spoilage organisms

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13
Q

why is the core removed?

A

core is rich in sucrose which Lm will metabolize to dextrose - slimy texture

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14
Q

why does sauerkraut have a diphasic growth curve?

A

The shoulder at ~8 days is when the heterofermentative LAB die, and the second growth curve (diphasic growth) is created when the homofermentative bacteria become dominant

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15
Q

is there still sugar present in the final sauerkraut

A

yes, the acidity is the limiting factor, not the sugar content
-The fermentation end point (21 days) includes mannitol and acetic acid at ~1% each and lactic acid at ~2%

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16
Q

heterolactic stage

A
  • produces lactic and volatile acetic acid

- HeteroLAB convert fructose to mannose

17
Q

relationship between pH and titratable acidity

A

The increases in titratable acidity corresponds to a decrease in pH

18
Q

which bacteria decrease in S in the first few days of fermentation?

A

enterobacteriaceae

aerobes and LAB increase

19
Q

temperature of kimchi

A

18C for a few days and then refrigerated at 1-2C

allows only heterolactic fermentation to occur (kimchi is not as sour as sauerkraut)

20
Q

which vitamin increases in K and S?

A

B