Summary
The generation of aroma compounds and the changes in sensory characteristics through the soy sauce koji fermentation were investigated to evaluate the crucial impact of the koji fermentation on soy sauce aroma. The sensory analysis showed a marked increase in ‘musty’ and ‘soy sauce‐like’ odours, whereas the beany attribute decreased significantly during koji fermentation. Aldehydes and alcohols were the major volatile classes present in the koji samples. Gas chromatography–olfactometry was used to identify the aroma‐active compounds in harvested koji, and the results showed that 1‐octen‐3‐ol, 3‐octanol, (E)‐2‐octenal, di‐epi‐α‐cedrene, benzeneacetaldehyde and 3‐(methylthio)‐propanal exhibited the greatest aroma intensities in harvest koji. Moreover, relative contents of (E)‐2‐octenal, benzeneacetaldehyde, 3‐(methylthio)‐propanal and 2‐phenylpropenal were found to be positively related to ‘musty’ and ‘soy sauce‐like’ odours. Results from principal component analysis showed that the growth and sporulation of Aspergillus oryzae had the important impacts on the volatile evolution.
Chemical composition of traditional Chinese-type soy sauce (TCSS) at different stages of manufacture (moromi fermentation and pasteurisation) were analysed. Results showed that total nitrogen, formaldehyde nitrogen, total titratable acid, reducing sugar, NaCl, water soluble peptides, free amino acids (FAAs) and Maillard reaction products in TCSS changed significantly during manufacture. Most of FAAs were released during initial stage (0-15 days) of moromi fermentation, peptides (1-5 kDa) kept dominant (69.34-80.88%) among all peptides during manufacture and Maillard reaction products increased progressively during moromi fermentation and increased sharply during pasteurisation. According to hierarchical cluster analysis and sensory evaluation, there were obvious correlation between FAAs and sensory score of over-all in TCSS during manufacture, which indicated that balanced FAAs composition might be mainly responsible for the taste formation of TCSS. Besides, pasteurisation can further improve the over-all taste of TCSS.
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