Abstract: Lighvan cheese is basically made from sheep milk in
the area of Sahand mountainside which is located in the North West
of Iran. The main objective of this study was to investigate the effect
of enterococci isolated from traditional Lighvan cheese on the quality
of Iranian UF white during ripening. The experimental design was
split plot based on randomized complete blocks, main plots were four
types of starters and subplots were different ripening durations.
Addition of Enterococcus spp. did not significantly (P
Abstract: Fruit drying is a well known process mostly used for
preservation of fruits. Osmotic dehydration of apricot slices were
carried out in three different salt-sucrose concentrations and four
different temperatures. Also three different weight ratios of solution
to sample were conducted to one set of experiments. The dehydration
curves were constructed using Peleg-s model. Increasing the solution
volume increased the mass transfer rate and hence the solid gain
increased rapidly. Increasing the volume of osmotic media caused an
increase in overall mass transfer but a 'solution to sample' ratio of 5:1
gave the best product quality. The best temperature and concentration
that had a high water loss to solid gain ratio and an acceptable taste
were 40°C and 5%, respectively.
Abstract: The relationships between Proteolysis and soluble
calcium levels with hardness of cheese texture were investigated in
Iranian UF white cheese during 90 d ripening. Cheeses were sampled
in interior and exterior. Results showed that levels of proteolysis,
soluble calcium and hardness of cheese texture changed significantly
(p< 0.05) over ripening. Levels of proteolysis and hardness were
significantly (p< 0.05) different in interior and exterior zones of
cheeses. External zones of cheeses became softer and had higher
levels of proteolysis compared to internal zones during ripening. The
highest correlation coefficient (r2= 0.979; p
Abstract: Nuts are part of a healthy diet such as Mediterranean diet. Benefits of nuts in reducing the risk of heart disease has been reasonably attributed to their composition of vitamins, minerals, unsaturated fatty acids, fiber and phytochemicals such as polyphenols, tocopherols, squalene and phytosterols. More than 75% of total fatty acids of nuts are unsaturated. α- tocopherol is the main tocopherol isomer present in most of the nuts. While walnuts, Brazil nut, cashew nut, peanut, pecan and pistachio nuts are rich in γ- tocopherol. β- sitosterol is dominant sterol in nuts. Pistachio and pine nut have the highest total phytosterol and Brazil nut and English walnut the lowest. Walnuts also contain large amount of phenolic compounds compared with other nuts. Nuts are rich in compounds with antioxidant properties and their consumption can offer preventing from incidence of many diseases including cardiovascular.