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ULTRAFILTRATION in DAIRY PROCESSING

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Title: ULTRAFILTRATION in DAIRY PROCESSING


1
ULTRAFILTRATIONinDAIRY PROCESSING
  • GID523E Advanced Technologies in Dairy Processing
  • Yrd.Doç.Dr.Meral Kiliç
  • H. Eda Bakir 506051503

2
Contents
  • Introduction
  • UF in Dairy Industry
  • Main areas
  • Categories
  • Advantages Disadvantages
  • Cheese quality
  • Studies on UF in Dairy Products
  • Conclusion

3
Introduction
  • What is Ultrafiltration (UF)?
  • Selective separation technique
  • MW 1000-200 000 Da
  • Cross-flow over a membrane surface
  • lt1000 kPa pressure
  • UF membranes pore sizes 1 to 100 nm
  • a polyethersulfone membrane for milk
    concentration process

4
UF produces from milk
  • Permeate
  • contains water, lactose, soluble minerals,
    non-protein nitrogen and water-soluble vitamins
  • Retentate
  • contains proteins, fat and colloidal salts
    increased in proportion.

5
UF in Dairy Industry
  • Most commonly used membrane technology in dairy
    industry (together with reverse osmosis)
  • Most widely used membrane technology in cheese
    industry
  • In 2001, gt450 000 t of cheese produced

6
UF in Dairy Industry
  • Most successful commercial application of UF in
    cheese manufacture
  • Feta in Denmark
  • Quarg, Ricotta, Cream cheeses in Germany other
    European countries
  • Standardization of milk protein to 4-5 for the
    production of Camambert and other varieties.

7
UF in Dairy Industry
  • Application of whey ultrafiltration in the dairy
    industry started with the separation and
    concentration of whey proteins from whey in 1972.
  • The application of ultrafiltration in cheese
    processing started in 1983 for production of
    cottage cheese and soft varieties

8
Three main areas in cheesemaking
  • Low concentration factor ultrafiltration
  • Medium concentration factor ultrafiltration
  • High concentration factor ultrafiltration

9
Low concentration factor ultrafiltration (LCF-UF)
  • 1.5 2.0X
  • standardization of milk to a fixed protein level
    to obtain a more consistent end product
  • variations in gel strength at cutting, buffering
    capacity, and rennet casein ratio are minimized

10
Medium concentration factor ultrafiltration
  • increased cheese yield associated with retention
    of whey proteins
  • increased moisture when whey proteins are
    denatured prior to filtration
  • main commercial application in the production of
    high-moisture, unripened cheeses (Quarg, Cream
    cheese) and of cheeses that are not very
    dependent on proteolysis during ripening for
    flavor development (Feta)

11
High concentration factor ultrafiltration (HCF-UF)
  • gt6.0X
  • widely used as an alternative to centrifugation,
    for concentrating the gelled milk in the
    commercial production of fresh acid-curd cheeses,
    such as Quarg and Cream cheese
  • allows complete recovery of whey proteins and
    gives higher yields of cheeses of very acceptable
    quality
  • used in commercial manufacture of rennet-curd
    cheeses, including cast Feta in Denmark and
    Cheddar in Australia

12
Three categories in cheesemaking
  • protein-standardized milk
  • seasonal variations in milk
  • intermediate or medium concentrated retentates
  • main application manufacture of structured Feta
    cheese
  • liquid pre-cheeses (LPC)

13
Advantages of UF
  • increases yield (16 to 20 increase in cheese)
  • reduces production costs (reduction of the
    quantity of coagulant used by 80)
  • new cheese varieties
  • allows the manufacture of curd in such a way that
    less, or even no, syneresis occurs

14
Disadvantages of UF
  • Fouling is the limiting factor in all
    applications of membrane filtration of milk
  • The amount of deposition on the membrane must be
    minimized, because the flux decreases and the
    selectivity of the seperation is affected
  • Different fouling mechanisms adsorption, pore
    blocking, cake layer formation, and depth fouling.

15
Properties of UF retentates
  • Buffering capacity
  • The buffering affect of pH 6.7 UF retentates
    leads to higher numbers of lactic starter
    bacteria in curd and resulting cheese
  • Rheological behaviour
  • The viscosity of UF retentates increases markedly
    with an increase in their protein content

16
Cheese quality
  • Texture
  • texture defects of UF cheeses are caused by the
    higher content of Ca salts if UF retentates of pH
    6.7 are used for making cheese
  • mineralization of the drained curd (total Ca and
    repartitioning of Ca between the casein matrix
    and the soluble phase) play an essential role in
    the rheology of the cheese variety. The mineral
    content may be adjusted.

17
Cheese quality
  • Proteolysis and ripening characteristics
  • UF cheese ripens more slowly than traditional
    cheese
  • the larger the amount of whey proteins
    incorporated, the slower the flavour development
  • The rate of flavour development may be improved
    by adding flavour-producing enzymes or cell
    extracts
  • Non-starter bacteria or slow-acidifying lactic
    microorganisms may be used for their proteolytic
    and flavour production potential

18
Cheese quality
  • Functionality
  • characteristics such as melting behaviour,
    shredding ability, viscosity and strachability
    became important when cheese is used as
    ingredient.
  • meltability of processed cheeses manufactured
    from Cheddar cheese base made from ultrafiltered
    milk is lower than that from regular Cheddar

19
Studies on UF in Dairy Products
  • Soejima, T., et all, 2003 evaluated the
    performance of centrifugal ultrafiltration method
    (UF) in comparison with trichloroacetic acid
    precipitation method (TCA) for the concentration
    of S. aureus enterotoxin in milk and dairy
    products.
  • Conclusion UF using a centrifugal
    ultrafiltration membrane can be more readily
    performed and similar to or more reliable than
    TCA.

20
Studies on UF in Dairy Products
  • Hydamaka, A.W., et all, 2000, used
    ultrafiltration technology for the production of
    direct acidified cheese.
  • Sensory evaluation indicated that cheese from
    ultrafiltration was preferred equally to
    traditional manufacture when the cheese was of
    similar composition

21
Studies on UF in Dairy Products
  • Erdem, Y.K., 2005 investigated the influence of
    ultrafiltration of whole and skim milk on
    rennetability in white pickled cheese
    manufacturing. The white cheese produced from
    unconcentrated whole milk via a traditional
    industrial method was compared with the white
    cheese produced by whole milk retentate (5.5-
    fold).
  • It was suggested that producing of white pickled
    cheese from whole milk retentate
    (full-concentrated) was more suitable than
    manufacturing from skim milk retentate and was
    than better the conventional method which uses
    unconcentrated milk.

22
Studies on UF in Dairy Products
  • Low, Y.H., et all, 2004, treated regular and
    ultrafiltered (UF 1X, 2X and 4X concentrated)
    skim milk samples with a range of enzymes
    including calf rennet, ficin and papain and
    determined the clotting properties, curd casein
    profiles and free amino acid (FAA) contents.
  • UF milk samples coagulated faster and formed
    firmer curds irrespective of protein
    concentration. The results suggest that the UF
    process may cause structural changes to proteins
    or other milk constituents with a resultant
    change in clotting properties and proteolysis of
    the casein molecules.

23
Studies on UF in Dairy Products
  • Erdem, Y.K., 2000 used fluorescent probe binding
    method to explain the changes on the surface of
    milk protein caused by ultrafiltration. Raw
    skimmilk samples were concentrated 2-fold and
    3-fold by ultrafiltration. The hydrophobicity of
    the surface sites of milk proteins in retentates
    and unconcentrated milk was examined.
  • It was found that the number of surface
    hydrophobic sites and afinity to the
    hydrophobic/fluorescent marker decreased with
    ultrafiltration. This study suggests that the
    renneting pattern for milk is changed by this
    modification and can be one of the main reasons
    for some problems in hard cheese manufacturing
    from retentate.

24
Studies on UF in Dairy Products
  • Anhydrous milkfat (AMF) exhibits a broad melting
    point range (.40 to 60 .C) which can be separated
    into fractions of different and narrow melting
    point ranges using membrane technology.
  • Abbas, H., et all, 2005 evaluated different
    membranes.
  • The results indicate that at the optimum
    operating conditions of pressure (300 psi) and
    moderate stirring speeds (100 rpm), and at
    constant fractionation temperatures (30, 23, 20,
    17, and 13.5 .C) carried out separately, using
    the UF membrane (30 kDa), AMF can be successfully
    fractionated.

25
Studies on UF in Dairy Products
  • Muthukumaran, S., et all, 2005 used low frequency
    ultrasound to facilitate cross-flow
    ultrafiltration of dairy whey solutions.
  • Experimental results show that ultrasonic
    irradiation at low power levels can significantly
    enhance the permeate flux with an enhancement
    factor of between 1.2 and 1.7. The use of
    turbulence promoters (spacers) in combination
    with ultrasound can lead to a doubling in the
    permeate flux.

26
Studies on UF in Dairy Products
  • Chen, C., et all, 2002, evaluated methods and
    enzymic processing conditions for manufacturing
    low-lactose milk containing oligosaccharides.
    Comparisons were made between the method of using
    b-galactosidase to transform the lactose in milk
    into oligosaccharides directly and the method of
    applying ultrafiltration techniques to separate
    lactose from milk proteins and then transform the
    lactose in the permeate into oligosaccharides.
  • a useful procedure for manufacturing low-lactose
    high-oligosaccharides milk would be to separate
    milk proteins from lactose by ultrafiltration
    first, concentrate the UF permeate by
    evaporation, apply enzymic reaction in the
    concentrated permeate, and add the hydrolysate to
    the retentate to obtain the final milk product.

27
Studies on UF in Dairy Products
  • Erdem, Y.K., 2005 investigated the effect of heat
    treatment on the structure of the milk protein
    system in unconcentrated bovine skimmilk and its
    twofold and threefold ultrafiltered retentates.
  • milk protein system was modified during and/or
    after ultrafiltration. The protein surface
    hydrophobicity index (PSH) of unconcentrated milk
    was the highest, followed by that of twofold and
    threefold retentates, respectively. It means that
    the protein system in skimmilk was reorganized to
    a more compact structure by ultrafiltration, and
    this reorganized structure gets stronger when the
    concentration factor was increased and the
    retentate was heat treated.

28
Studies on UF in Dairy Products
  • Mehaia, 2002, studied manufacturing procedures
    and compositional characteristics for fresh soft
    white cheese (Domiati-type) using
    ultrafilltration (UF) and conventional processes
    and evaluated yields, recovery of protein, fat,
    total solids and sensory characteristics of this
    type of cheese
  • An increase of 21 in cheese yields, 2126 in
    protein recovery, 1519 in fat recovery and
    1722 in total solids recovery was achieved by
    the UF process

29
Conclusion
  • UF has been used widely in dairy industry since
    1970s, and in cheese manufacture since 1980s.
  • Several studies has been held on various aspects
    of UF applications in dairy industry.
  • UF increases yield and lowers production costs in
    dairy processing.
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