Effects of different heat-induced setting methods on the structural stability and properties of 3D-printed surimi gels

Surimi has gained popularity as a food-grade ink for the creation of novel 3D-printed foods. However, existing research predominantly focus on the printability of surimi and the resulting printed models, with limited attention given to the post-processing of these 3D-printed structures. Towards this...

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Published in:LWT
Main Author: Yang Z.; Lu K.; Zhao Y.; Shi X.; Mao W.; Zheng B.; Xu Y.; Gao P.; Zhou R.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academic Press 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85189024462&doi=10.1016%2fj.lwt.2024.115957&partnerID=40&md5=4ad4ec768d12328ac223391e4e3b08f8
id 2-s2.0-85189024462
spelling 2-s2.0-85189024462
Yang Z.; Lu K.; Zhao Y.; Shi X.; Mao W.; Zheng B.; Xu Y.; Gao P.; Zhou R.
Effects of different heat-induced setting methods on the structural stability and properties of 3D-printed surimi gels
2024
LWT
198

10.1016/j.lwt.2024.115957
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85189024462&doi=10.1016%2fj.lwt.2024.115957&partnerID=40&md5=4ad4ec768d12328ac223391e4e3b08f8
Surimi has gained popularity as a food-grade ink for the creation of novel 3D-printed foods. However, existing research predominantly focus on the printability of surimi and the resulting printed models, with limited attention given to the post-processing of these 3D-printed structures. Towards this knowledge gap, our study systematically investigated the impact of five common heat-induced setting methods, including one-step water bath (W1), two-stage water bath (W2), steam (S), oven (O) and microwave (M), on various 3D-printed models. Results showed that water bath-based methods (W1 and W2) induced the swelling of the 3D-printed models along the vertical axis, while O and M led to structural shrinkage. Due to the compensatory effect of water, W1 and W2 exhibited minimal cooking loss but higher levels of free water. S significantly reduced the water holding capacity due to a decrease in hydrogen bonds among the proteins. O resulted in substantial moisture loss, surface condensation and insufficient gelation. M with superior heat transfer efficiency favored extensive protein aggregation driven by the increased chemical forces, leading to a coarser gel network with highest gel strength. We expect that this study could provide new insights into the role of heat-induced setting methods in manufacturing 3D-printed surimi foods. © 2024 The Authors
Academic Press
236438
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Yang Z.; Lu K.; Zhao Y.; Shi X.; Mao W.; Zheng B.; Xu Y.; Gao P.; Zhou R.
spellingShingle Yang Z.; Lu K.; Zhao Y.; Shi X.; Mao W.; Zheng B.; Xu Y.; Gao P.; Zhou R.
Effects of different heat-induced setting methods on the structural stability and properties of 3D-printed surimi gels
author_facet Yang Z.; Lu K.; Zhao Y.; Shi X.; Mao W.; Zheng B.; Xu Y.; Gao P.; Zhou R.
author_sort Yang Z.; Lu K.; Zhao Y.; Shi X.; Mao W.; Zheng B.; Xu Y.; Gao P.; Zhou R.
title Effects of different heat-induced setting methods on the structural stability and properties of 3D-printed surimi gels
title_short Effects of different heat-induced setting methods on the structural stability and properties of 3D-printed surimi gels
title_full Effects of different heat-induced setting methods on the structural stability and properties of 3D-printed surimi gels
title_fullStr Effects of different heat-induced setting methods on the structural stability and properties of 3D-printed surimi gels
title_full_unstemmed Effects of different heat-induced setting methods on the structural stability and properties of 3D-printed surimi gels
title_sort Effects of different heat-induced setting methods on the structural stability and properties of 3D-printed surimi gels
publishDate 2024
container_title LWT
container_volume 198
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.lwt.2024.115957
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85189024462&doi=10.1016%2fj.lwt.2024.115957&partnerID=40&md5=4ad4ec768d12328ac223391e4e3b08f8
description Surimi has gained popularity as a food-grade ink for the creation of novel 3D-printed foods. However, existing research predominantly focus on the printability of surimi and the resulting printed models, with limited attention given to the post-processing of these 3D-printed structures. Towards this knowledge gap, our study systematically investigated the impact of five common heat-induced setting methods, including one-step water bath (W1), two-stage water bath (W2), steam (S), oven (O) and microwave (M), on various 3D-printed models. Results showed that water bath-based methods (W1 and W2) induced the swelling of the 3D-printed models along the vertical axis, while O and M led to structural shrinkage. Due to the compensatory effect of water, W1 and W2 exhibited minimal cooking loss but higher levels of free water. S significantly reduced the water holding capacity due to a decrease in hydrogen bonds among the proteins. O resulted in substantial moisture loss, surface condensation and insufficient gelation. M with superior heat transfer efficiency favored extensive protein aggregation driven by the increased chemical forces, leading to a coarser gel network with highest gel strength. We expect that this study could provide new insights into the role of heat-induced setting methods in manufacturing 3D-printed surimi foods. © 2024 The Authors
publisher Academic Press
issn 236438
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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