Food Analogues: Emerging Methods and Challenges [electronic resource] / edited by Özlem Pelin CAN, Meryem GÖKSEL SARAÇ, Duygu ASLAN TÜRKER.

Colaborador(es): CAN, Özlem Pelin [editor.] | GÖKSEL SARAÇ, Meryem [editor.] | ASLAN TÜRKER, Duygu [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: Cham : Springer Nature Switzerland : Imprint: Springer, 2024Edición: 1st ed. 2024Descripción: X, 569 p. 49 illus., 45 illus. in color. online resourceTipo de contenido: text Tipo de medio: computer Tipo de portador: online resourceISBN: 9783031698729Tema(s): Food -- Sensory evaluation | Food science | Food -- Microbiology | Consumer behavior | Sensory Evaluation | Food Engineering | Food Microbiology | Consumer Behavior | Food ScienceFormatos físicos adicionales: Printed edition:: Sin título; Printed edition:: Sin título; Printed edition:: Sin títuloClasificación CDD: 664.072 Clasificación LoC:TX546Recursos en línea: Libro electrónicoTexto
Contenidos:
Meat analogs: Prospects and challenges -- Milk and Dairy Products Analogues -- Egg Analogues -- The production, ingredients and resulting sensory properties of plant-based chicken analogues -- Proteins for Analogue Foods -- Vegetable Oils for Analogue Food Production -- Spirulina: Exploring Its Promising Role in Food Industry and Overcoming Challenges as a Food Analogue -- Edible marine biological materials in food analogues -- Edible insects in Food analogues -- Hybrid meat products: using plant, fungi, and insect sources for flexitarian diets - technological, nutritional and sensory insights -- Rheological and textural properties of food analogues -- Microbiology aspects of food analogues -- Application of Multi-Criteria Decision Making Techniques in Sensory Evaluation of Food Analogue -- 3D Printing for The Production of Food Analogues -- Packaging aspects of food analogues -- Regulatory aspects of food analogues in food sciences Food analogues in the European Union: a legal perspective -- Environmental Impacts/Benefits/Risk Of Food Analogues -- The future of meat analogues.
En: Springer Nature eBookResumen: As vegetarian and vegan diets have taken hold across the Western world in recent years, the food industry has in turn seen a burgeoning demand for plant-based substitutes, known as analogues. Consumers are hungry for a product that aligns with their values, meets their nutritional needs, and also delivers on its promise of simulating the qualities of its target food item, be that beef, chicken, egg or dairy. Researchers are thus continually working to more closely approximate not only the taste but also the aesthetic, textural and rheological properties of the food item they are imitating. Meanwhile, questions about the nutritional content and environmental impact of food analogues are also of major interest for conscious consumers. While existing volumes have covered specific analogues such as meat or dairy, Food Analogues: Emerging Methods and Challenges will be the first to offer an authoritative overview of all food analogues and comprehensively assess the current and future state of the industry. This text covers both the fundamental processes of textural manipulation and sensory evaluation as well as the microbiological and regulatory aspects of these plant-based substitutes. Looking towards the future of food analogue technology, it will also discuss promising new approaches such as the use of 3D printing and edible insects in analogue production. This book will be of value to researchers, manufacturers, regulators, nutritionists, and even consumers themselves, seeking to make more informed decisions about their diets.
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Meat analogs: Prospects and challenges -- Milk and Dairy Products Analogues -- Egg Analogues -- The production, ingredients and resulting sensory properties of plant-based chicken analogues -- Proteins for Analogue Foods -- Vegetable Oils for Analogue Food Production -- Spirulina: Exploring Its Promising Role in Food Industry and Overcoming Challenges as a Food Analogue -- Edible marine biological materials in food analogues -- Edible insects in Food analogues -- Hybrid meat products: using plant, fungi, and insect sources for flexitarian diets - technological, nutritional and sensory insights -- Rheological and textural properties of food analogues -- Microbiology aspects of food analogues -- Application of Multi-Criteria Decision Making Techniques in Sensory Evaluation of Food Analogue -- 3D Printing for The Production of Food Analogues -- Packaging aspects of food analogues -- Regulatory aspects of food analogues in food sciences Food analogues in the European Union: a legal perspective -- Environmental Impacts/Benefits/Risk Of Food Analogues -- The future of meat analogues.

As vegetarian and vegan diets have taken hold across the Western world in recent years, the food industry has in turn seen a burgeoning demand for plant-based substitutes, known as analogues. Consumers are hungry for a product that aligns with their values, meets their nutritional needs, and also delivers on its promise of simulating the qualities of its target food item, be that beef, chicken, egg or dairy. Researchers are thus continually working to more closely approximate not only the taste but also the aesthetic, textural and rheological properties of the food item they are imitating. Meanwhile, questions about the nutritional content and environmental impact of food analogues are also of major interest for conscious consumers. While existing volumes have covered specific analogues such as meat or dairy, Food Analogues: Emerging Methods and Challenges will be the first to offer an authoritative overview of all food analogues and comprehensively assess the current and future state of the industry. This text covers both the fundamental processes of textural manipulation and sensory evaluation as well as the microbiological and regulatory aspects of these plant-based substitutes. Looking towards the future of food analogue technology, it will also discuss promising new approaches such as the use of 3D printing and edible insects in analogue production. This book will be of value to researchers, manufacturers, regulators, nutritionists, and even consumers themselves, seeking to make more informed decisions about their diets.

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