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Alkaline-Fermented Foods: A Review with Emphasis on Pidan Fermentation

 

作者: WangJing,   FungDaniel Y. C.,  

 

期刊: Critical Reviews in Microbiology  (Taylor Available online 1996)
卷期: Volume 22, issue 2  

页码: 101-138

 

ISSN:1040-841X

 

年代: 1996

 

DOI:10.3109/10408419609106457

 

出版商: Taylor&Francis

 

关键词: alkaline-fermented foods;alkaline fermentation;pidan fermentation

 

数据来源: Taylor

 

摘要:

AbstractAlkaline-fermented foods constitute a group of less-known food products that are widely consumed in Southeast Asia and African countries. They can be made from different raw ingredients. For instance, Japanese natto, Thai thua-nao, and kinema are made from cooked soybeans, dawadawa from African locust beans, ogiri from melon seeds, ugba from African oil beans, kawal from fresh legale leaves, owoh from cotton seeds, and pidan from fresh poultry eggs. In alkaline-fermented foods, the protein of the raw materials is broken down into amino acids and peptides; ammonia is released during the fermentation, raising the pH of the final products and giving the food a strong ammoniacal smell. Most alkaline fermentations are achieved spontaneously by mixed bacteria cultures, principally dominated byBacillus subtilis. In other cases, pure cultures can be used. For example, Japanese natto is inoculated with a pure culture ofB. subtilisvarnatto.Pidan is a special example of alkaline fermentation. Instead of using microorganisms, pidan is made using an alkali-treated fermentation. Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is produced from the reaction of sodium carbonate (Na2CO3), water (H2O), and calcium oxide (CaO) of pickle or coating mud. NaOH penetrates into the eggs, causing the physicochemical changes, color changes, and gelation. The appearance of pidan differs from fresh eggs in that the white becomes a semitransparent tea-brown color, and the yolk is solid or semisolid with a dark-green color. The nutritional value of pidan is slightly decreased compared with fresh eggs, but pidan has an extremely long shelf life and a pleasant, fragrant taste that is preferred by most people in Southeast Asian countries.In a small-scale laboratory study conducted by the authors,B. subtiliswas not found in pidan.Four Staphylococcusspp. (S. cohnii, S. epidermidis, S. haemolyticus, andS. warneri) and two strains ofBacillusspp. (B. cereusandB. macerans) were isolated from pidan.Staphylococcusspp. did not contribute to the fermentation and were considered contaminants.

 

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