Pectin Stabilized Fish Gelatin Emulsions: Physical Stability, Rheological, and Interaction Properties

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Abstract

Pectin, a kind of natural polysaccharide, shows the attractive potential as a natural stabilizer for protein emulsion. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of pectin on the physical stability, rheology, interface, and interaction properties of the fish gelatin (FG) emulsion, as pectin was utilized to improve the stability of FG, fish oil emulsion. During the study, when pH < 6, the FG-pectin emulsion displayed better storage stability and salinity tolerance. Analyzing the result, pectin could avoid phase separation at the freeze-thaw process and prevent the liquid-gel transition of FG emulsions during storage. On the other hand, when pH ≥ 6, the emulsion displayed high viscosity due to the complex flocculation and stratified during long-term storage. Electrostatic interactions, hydrophobic interactions, and hydrogen bonding of the FG-pectin complexes in the emulsion were all reduced. Overall, pectin improved the stability of FG emulsions through electrostatic repulsion, hydrophobic interactions, and steric hindrance.

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Huang, S., Wang, H., Wang, S., Sha, X., Chen, N., Hu, Y., & Tu, Z. (2022). Pectin Stabilized Fish Gelatin Emulsions: Physical Stability, Rheological, and Interaction Properties. Frontiers in Nutrition, 9. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.961875

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