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Significance of frictional heating for effects of high pressure homogenisation on milk

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2005

Nivedita Datta
Affiliation:
Australian Dairy Industry Centre for UHT Processing, School of Land and Food Sciences, University of Queensland, Queensland, Australia
Maurice G Hayes
Affiliation:
Department of Food and Nutritional Sciences, University College, Cork, Ireland
Hilton C Deeth
Affiliation:
Australian Dairy Industry Centre for UHT Processing, School of Land and Food Sciences, University of Queensland, Queensland, Australia
Alan L Kelly
Affiliation:
Department of Food and Nutritional Sciences, University College, Cork, Ireland

Abstract

High pressure homogenisation (HPH) is a novel dairy processing tool, which has many effects on enzymes, microbes, fat globules and proteins in milk. The effects of HPH on milk are due to a combination of shear forces and frictional heating of the milk during processing; the relative importance of these different factors is unclear, and was the focus of this study. The effect of milk inlet temperature (in the range 10–50 °C) on residual plasmin, alkaline phosphatase, lactoperoxidase and lipase activities in raw whole bovine milk homogenised at 200 MPa was investigated. HPH caused significant heating of the milk; outlet temperature increased in a linear fashion (0·5887 °C/°C, R2=0·9994) with increasing inlet temperature. As milk was held for 20 s at the final temperature before cooling, samples of the same milk were heated isothermally in glass capillary tubes for the same time/temperature combinations. Inactivation profiles of alkaline phosphatase in milk were similar for isothermal heating or HPH, indicating that loss of enzyme activity was due to heating alone. Loss of plasmin and lactoperoxidase activity in HPH milk, however, was greater than that in heated milk. Large differences in residual lipase activities in milks subjected to heating or HPH were observed due to the significant increase in lipase activity in homogenised milk. Denaturation of β-lactoglobulin was more extensive following HPH than the equivalent heat treatment. Inactivation of plasmin was correlated with increasing fat/serum interfacial area but was not correlated with denaturation of β-lactoglobulin. Thus, while some effects of HPH on milk are due to thermal effects alone, many are induced by the combination of forces and heating to which the milk is exposed during HPH.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Proprietors of Journal of Dairy Research 2005

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