PROCESS FOR PREPARING PLANT PROTEIN COMPOSITIONS, AND PLANT PROTEIN COMPOSITION OBTAINABLE BY SAID PROCESS

20240130394 ยท 2024-04-25

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    The present invention is related to a process for preparing a plant protein-containing composition, said method comprising the steps of wet-milling a protein-containing material so as to obtain a composition with a particle size distribution (PSD) d.sub.90 of less than 30 ?m; microfiltration of the composition; and ultra-filtration of the composition. The present invention is furthermore related to a plant protein-containing composition obtainable by said process, and to a food product comprising said plant protein-containing composition.

    Claims

    1. A process for preparing a plant protein-containing composition, said method comprising the steps: a) Wet-milling a plant protein-containing material, having a protein content of more than 20 wt.-%, preferably more than 35 wt.-% and even more preferably more than 50 wt.-% of the entire dry weight of the material, so as to obtain a composition with a particle size distribution (PSD) d90 of less than 30 ?m, preferably less than 10 ?m, more preferably less than 2 ?m, and especially preferred less than 1 ?m; b) Microfiltration of the composition obtained after step a); c) Ultrafiltration of the composition obtained after step b).

    2. The process according to claim 1, wherein in step a) wet-milling is conducted in water, preferably having a pH value in the range from 6 to 11, more preferably in the range from 8 and 9.5.

    3. The process according to claim 1, wherein in step a) wet-milling is conducted in a water-oil mixture.

    4. The process according to claim 3, wherein the water-oil mixture contain less than 10 wt.-% oil, more preferably less than 5 wt.-% oil and especially preferred less than 2 wt.-% oil.

    5. The process according to claim 1, wherein in step c) ultrafiltration is combined with diafiltration.

    6. The process according to claim 1, wherein the process comprises an additional step d) of concentrating the composition obtained after step c).

    7. The process according to claim 5, wherein step d) involves ultrafiltration.

    8. The process according to claim 1, wherein the plant protein-containing material is a pea protein concentrate.

    9. The process according to claim 1, wherein the plant protein-containing material is a pea protein isolate.

    10. A plant protein-containing composition, obtainable by a process according to claim 1.

    11. The plant protein-containing composition according to claim 9, wherein said composition is a pea protein-containing composition.

    12. A food product, comprising a plant protein-containing composition according to claim 9.

    13. The food product according to claim 11, wherein said plant protein-containing composition is a pea protein-containing composition.

    14. The food product according to claim 11, wherein said food product is a beverage.

    15. The food product according to claim 11, wherein said food product is a meat analogue product.

    Description

    [0093] The present invention will now be described in more detail with reference to non-limiting examples and drawings.

    [0094] It is shown:

    [0095] FIG. 1 a diagram showing the particle size distributions of various samples

    [0096] FIG. 2A a photograph of a pea protein concentrate (stained with methylene blue) before the process of the invention

    [0097] FIG. 2B a photograph of a pea protein concentrate (stained with methylene blue) after the process of the invention

    [0098] FIG. 3 a diagram showing the reduction of a selection of off-flavour compounds by the process of the invention

    EXAMPLE 1

    [0099] Several samples of a 15-20% pea protein concentrate slurry in water (i.e. the slurry contained 80-95 wt.-% water) with 2% added oil were subjected to a wet-milling step described above. As can be seen from FIG. 1, all samples had a particle size distribution (PSD) D.sub.90 of less than 30 ?m.

    [0100] As can be seen from FIGS. 2a and 2b, during the milling step starch granules were significantly broken down. Whereas before milling (FIG. 2a) a lot of intact starch granules could be identified, after wet-milling (FIG. 2b) most of the starch granules were degraded. This imparts favourable properties on the final plant protein-containing composition, as discussed above.

    [0101] The thus obtained composition was diluted to 5% solids concentration and subjected to microfiltration with a ceramic membrane pore filter with a pore size of 1.4 ?m. As can be seen from table 1 below, said microfiltration led to a significant decrease of the fat content and to a small decrease of the protein content in the composition (the recovered microfiltration permeate). The fat content and protein contents were determined by conventional methods (acid determination for fat, and nitrogen content determination according to Kjeldahl for protein).

    TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Composition before and after microfiltration Content before Content in Content in microfiltration microfiltration microfiltration Component (wt.-%) retentate (wt.-%) permeate (wt.-%) Fat 22.7 23.9 <0.3 Protein 43.8 48.3 47.4

    [0102] It can be seen that during microfiltration, only a small amount of the desired protein was lost from the composition, whereas essentially the entire fat content could be separated from the composition.

    [0103] The composition was subsequently subjected to an ultrafiltration step by a flat sheet membrane with a pore size of 50 kDa. As can be seen in Table 2, no fat was further removed, but the protein content was enriched in the recovered ultrafiltration retentate. A small amount of proteins was lost in the ultrafiltration permeate, mainly containing small bitter peptides.

    TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Composition before and after ultrafiltration Content before Content in Content in ultrafiltration ultrafiltration ultrafiltration Component (wt.-%) retentate (wt.-%) permeate (wt.-%) Fat <0.3 0.3 <0.3 Protein 47.4 61.7 17.2

    [0104] As can be seen from FIG. 3, the final composition contained a significantly decreased amount of volatile components responsible for adverse flavor and/or taste, especially bitterness, and astringency can be achieved along with a favorable modification of the particle characteristics. In particular, the amount of hexanal which is significantly responsible for adverse flavour, could be reduced to an amount of less than about 10% of the amount of hexanal in the starting protein containing material.