Films were cast and dried from heated, alkaline aqueous egg albumen solutions containing glycerin (GLY) at 30, 40, or 50% w/w of protein, polyethylene glycol (PEG) at 50 or 60%, or sorbitol (S) at 50 or 60% as plasticizers. PEG-plasticized (60%) films also were prepared by substituting 10, 30, 50, or 70% of albumen with yolk solids. Film tensile strength (TS), elongation at break (E), water vapor permeability (WVP), and Hunter color values were measured. At a plasticizer content of 50%, films with S had the lowest WVP while films with PEG had the greatest E. S-and PEG-plasticized films had greater TS than GLY-plasticized films. Yolk solids decreased film TS, E, and WVP while increasing film yellowness.
Trial 1 tested the effects of ground vs whole flaxseed at dietary levels of 5, 10, or 15% compared to a corn-soybean or fish oil control on egg production of Leghorn hens over a period of 8 wk. Dietary flaxseed decreased feed consumption, weight gain, and egg weights compared to the control diets; however, flaxseed and fish oil significantly improved egg production (88.9 and 93.0%, respectively) compared to the control (83.1%). Incorporation of linolenic acid (C18:3n-3) into the egg increased linearly as the level of dietary flaxseed increased (2.31, 4.18, or 6.83% of the yolk fatty acids for 5, 10, and 15% flaxseed diets, respectively). In Trial 1, flaxseed and fish oil significantly increased percentage white and decreased percentage yolk compared to the control treatment but had no effects on egg cholesterol. Trial 2 was a factorial design of varieties of flaxseed (brown vs golden), types (ground vs whole), levels of dietary vitamin E (27 vs 50 IU/kg), and feed storage temperatures (4 vs 21 C) fed to hens for 6 wk. Brown flaxseed significantly increased egg weight and egg production compared to the golden variety. There was no difference in whole vs ground flaxseed for measured production variables. Vitamin E (50 IU) significantly improved egg production (96.1 vs 94.3%) compared to 27 IU. Storage temperature of flaxseed did not significantly affect any production variables. In conclusion, dietary flaxseed can be safely added whole to layer diets up to 15% without any detrimental effects on hen-day egg production. Levels of 10 to 15% flaxseed yield eggs with 4 to 7% yolk n-3 fatty acids, respectively, making these eggs rich sources of n-3 fatty acids.
The functional properties of heat-induced egg white gels were investigated at five pH values. Textural characteristics were determined using the Instron Universal Machine. Hardness, elasticity, cohesiveness, chewiness, and fracturability were maximum at pH 11. Hunter L values were maximum at pH 5 and 7. Microstructure studied with electron microscopy was distinctly different at the five pH values. Alkaline gels showed a fine ordered network that might have contributed to excellent textural characteristics. Water-holding capacity (WHC) was high at alkaline pH, but decreased with addition of 2-mercaptoethanol, suggesting that disulfide bonds were important in egg white gels. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) improved WHC at pH 7 and 9. No significant correlation was observed between textural profiles and WHC.
Cooked mechanically deboned chicken meat (MDCM), washed with tap water, 0.5% sodium bicarbonate, sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.2; ionic strength, O.l), or O.lM sodium chloride had increased (PeO.05) gel strength compared to unwashed MDCM. The selected washing solutions affected (PcO.05) lightness (HunterLab L values) of washed meat, and also had a slight (P
Films were cast from heated (40 °C for 20 min) alkaline (pH 11.25)
aqueous solutions of egg white
(EW) solids (9 g/100 mL of water), polyethylene glycol 400 (60% w/w of
EW), yolk solids (10% w/w
of EW), and dialdehyde starch (DAS) at 0, 2.5, 5, 7.5, or 10% (w/w) of
EW. For all types of films,
tensile strength (TS), percentage elongation at break (E),
Hunter color values (L, a, and b),
total
soluble matter (TSM) after immersion in water at 25 °C for 24 h, and
protein solubility (PS) after
immersion for 12 h in buffers (pH 8) containing urea and
urea/2-mercaptoethanol were determined.
DAS addition increased (P < 0.05) film TS and
yellowness (+b values) and reduced (P < 0.05)
film
TSM and PS in both buffer systems. These modifications in film
properties suggested occurrence
of cross-linking between EW protein and DAS. This was further
supported by SDS−PAGE patterns.
Such patterns for DAS-containing films revealed bands of
aggregates, increasing in intensity with
increasing amounts of DAS, which were absent from patterns of control
EW films.
Keywords: Egg albumen; protein films; dialdehyde starch;
cross-linking
A trial was conducted to study the effects of strain, age, and diet on egg production, egg composition, and yolk fatty acid incorporation. Three strains (six pens of eight hens per strain), [DeKalb Delta (D); Babcock B 300 (B); and Hy-Line W-36 (H)], were subjected to a 10% flax diet + oats from 30 to 50 wk of age. At 50 wk, hens were divided into two groups and one half were kept on flax + oats diets (three pens) or assigned to a second diet of flax - oats (three pens) to 60 wk of age. Eggs were collected at 36 and 58 wk of age for fatty acid and lipid analysis. Strain had an early effect (30 to 50 wk) on egg production with B (85.3) exceeding the other two strains D (81.0) and H (79.1). Strain D had greater feed consumption and egg weight than either B or H. Flax - oats increased percentage shell compared to flax + oats. Strain effect was significant for percentage albumin, which was greatest for D (61.2%) vs H (59.5%) and B (59.4%). Strain D had significantly lower total and percentage yolk lipids than the other two strains. Strain B eggs had more C16:0, but less C18:0 and C18:1 than D and H. No significant effect of strain on C18:2, C18:3, and C22:6 deposition was observed. Percentage C18:0 and C18:1 in the yolk was significantly affected by strain, diet, and strain x diet interaction. Dietary flax + oats increased C18:0 and C18:1 in all strains except H. A significant diet by strain interaction effect occurred such that C18:3 increased in D yolk but decreased in B yolk when flax + oats were fed. Deposition of C18:3 was greater at 58 wk (5.61%) than at 36 wk (2.52%) of age across all strains. Results from these trials indicate that strain, diet, and age can affect yolk lipids and composition.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.