Functional properties of frozen dairy systems and their relation to ice cream texture: a review

Authors

  • María Aurora Pintor-Jardines Laboratorio de Alimentos, Instituto Tecnológico de Estudios Superiores de Ecatepec. Av. Tecnológico esq. Av. Central s/n, Ecatepec, Estado de México, México, C.P. 55210.
  • Alfonso Totosaus-Sánchez Laboratorio de Alimentos, Instituto Tecnológico de Estudios Superiores de Ecatepec. Av. Tecnológico esq. Av. Central s/n, Ecatepec, Estado de México, México, C.P. 55210.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29059/cienciauat.v7i2.15

Keywords:

Functional properties, dairy systems, ice cream, texture.

Abstract

Ice cream is a colloidal dispersion that consists of one disperse phase, immer­sed in a continuous phase of high visco­sity. The disperse phase has three main components that provide its structure: air bubbles, ice crystals and emulsified and dispersed fat globules. The liquid phase is, in turn, composed by sugar, milk protein and hydrocolloids dissolved in non-frozen water. This paper reviews the effect of the functional properties of the different ingredients on the sta­bility of this complex mix, and on the formation of the tridimensional struc­ture of the disperse phase, influencing the microscopic size and dispersion of the air bubbles, the fat globules and the ice crystals that macroscopically give the creamy taste of ice cream.

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Published

2013-06-30

How to Cite

Pintor-Jardines, M. A., & Totosaus-Sánchez, A. (2013). Functional properties of frozen dairy systems and their relation to ice cream texture: a review. CienciaUAT, 7(2), 56–61. https://doi.org/10.29059/cienciauat.v7i2.15

Issue

Section

Biotechnology and Agricultural Sciences

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