Effect of adding some medicinal and aromatic plant extracts on physiochemical, Microbiological and sensory properties of drinking yogurt | ||
Kirkuk University Journal For Agricultural Sciences | ||
Article 24, Volume 13, Issue 4, Autumn 2022, Page 278-308 PDF (733 K) | ||
Document Type: Research Paper | ||
DOI: 10.58928/ku22.134024 | ||
Authors | ||
Israa Mohsen Khalil; Mahdi Hassan Hussain | ||
Al-Qasim Green University, College of Food Sciences | ||
Abstract | ||
This study aimed to produce drinking yogurt using a lactic acid bacteria starter (Streptococcus thermophilus and Lactobacillus bulgaricus) with different concentrations of aqueous aromatic medicinal plant extracts garlic: )0.2%, 0.5% and 0.8%) and mint: )1%, 2.5% and 4%) . The treatments were stored up to 21 days at 4 ± 1 ° C . The physicochemical properties were studied, which included the measurement of (pH, total acidity, and viscosity) and microbiological examinations represented by counting the (starter bacteria, coliform, Staphylococcus aureus, as well as yeasts and molds) and sensory characteristics were measured after manufacturing on the first day , 7, 14 and 21 days of storage. The results showed that there were no significant differences in pH values immediately after manufacturing for all treatments. As for the percentage of total acidity (TTA), it was close to immediately after manufacturing for all the different drinking yogurt treatments, while during storage, a clear increase in their values was observed for all transactions. As for the viscosity values, significant differences were found in their values immediately after manufacturing and during cold storage and for all treatments. The results showed that the addition of aqueous extracts to the drinking yogurt did not affect the numbers of starter bacteria and their activity throughout the storage period compared to the control sample. Also, the results showed that the superiority of concentrations (2.5%) for mint and (0.2%) for garlic in the sensory evaluation of the characteristics of taste, flavor, texture and general acceptance | ||
Keywords | ||
Plant extract; Aqueous mint extract; Microbiological; Drinking yogurt | ||
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