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Filamentous/solid fermentation

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Filamentous/solid fermentation Tempeh Quorn Soya sauce Commercial mushrooms Cheese Penicillin Agricultural waste 2.1 x 1012 kg per year cereal straw, sugarcane and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Filamentous/solid fermentation


1
Filamentous/solid fermentation
  • Tempeh
  • Quorn
  • Soya sauce
  • Commercial mushrooms
  • Cheese
  • Penicillin

2
Agricultural waste
  • 2.1 x 1012 kg per year
  • cereal straw, sugarcane and sugar beet residue
  • primarily cellulose and lignins
  • low digestibility (40-60) even for herbivores
  • subsistence nutrition
  • leads to low growth rates, and need for feed
    supplements (especially lysine!)

3
Tempeh traditional
  • Used for food and feed
  • Modifying agricultural waste ? materials that do
    not have economic value by direct use, or for
    conversion by animals into valuable products
  • Undigestible carbohydrates are wrapped in large
    leaves (banana) and left 1-2 d for solid
    fermentation
  • Mixed inoculum of wild fungi

4
Tempeh food
  • Tempeh Rhizopus oligosporus
  • Soya beans or other plant material
  • Uses similar to tofu

5
Quorn mycoprotein
  • Fusarium graminearum A3/5
  • 1964 RankHovisMcDougall (RHM) ? high-protein
    foods from starch
  • Highly branched colonial mutant CC1-1 that
    arose spontaneously in a glucose-limited culture
    of F. graminearum (now called F. venatum)
  • Unlike tofu, has a meat-like texture, chewiness,
    mouthfeel
  • January 1985 marketed in England
  • Vegetarianism Mad cow disease
  • February 2002 marketed in USA
  • http//www.cce.cornell.edu/food/fsarchives/050602/
    quorn.html

6
Culturing Fusarium graminearum A3/5
  • Isolated from soil, UK
  • Liquid fermenters stirred and cooled
  • Oxygen, nitrogen, waste soluble carbohydrates,
    and vitamins
  • RNA-reduction process debittering improves
    digestibility
  • Current annual production 14,000 tons
  • between chicken and mushroom in texture, with
    very little inherent flavor

7
Quorn mycoprotein ? publicity
  • Quorn fillets are made from succulent mushroom
    protein, coated in light crispy batter
  • like mushrooms, truffles and morels
  • hails from the fungi family
  • deliver unrivaled taste, as well as an
    exceptional nutritional profile.
  • excellent source of protein and fiber
  • cholesterol free low in fat, especially
    saturated fat

8

Single Cell Protein technology
  • Toprina animal feed 1970s
  • Candida lipolytica cultivated on C15 n-alkanes
  • initially at Grangemouth (Scotland) later
    production scale in Sardinia
  • significant feature ? hydrocarbon was completely
    fermented
  • protein content 65
  • production uneconomic due to cost of cooling the
    fermenters

9
Soya sauce, miso, tamari
  • Soya bean wheat flour Aspergillus
  • ? Koji mold

Sprinkled over toasted wheat flour
Steamed soya beans Cooled
Sprinkled with Aspergillus sojae
10
Soya sauce, miso, tamari
  • Three days of aerobic fermentation
  • Cool temperature to prevent bacterial overgrowth
  • Transferred to barrels
  • Brine added to 15 salt

18 months
11
Soya sauce, miso, tamari
Liquid soya sauce Solid miso and
tamari Further maturation ? up to several
months, cool temperature
12
Tempeh
  • Soybeans are boiled and dehulled
  • Rhizopus oligosporus grows lt 24 h, creating a
    solid cake of hyphae/beans
  • Soybeans are made more digestible by lipases and
    proteases secreted by Rhizopus,as well as fungal
    components
  • Growth is halted (cooking, freezing) before
    sporulation begins (NB oligosporus few spores
  • Traditionally, tempeh is stored wrapped in banana
    leaves, and eaten soon after preparation

13
Modified forage
  • 2.1 x 1012 kg per year cereal straw, sugarcane
    and sugar beet residue contains nutrients,
    primarily as cellulose and lignins
  • low digestibility (40-60) even for herbivores
  • generally subsistence nutrition, but leads to low
    growth rates, and need for feed supplements
  • uses naturally occurring fungi, /or inoculated
    deliberately

14
Basic Mushroom culture
  • Grow spawn on grains
  • Inoculate substrate
  • Mycelial growth in substrate
  • Fruiting, harvest, grading

15
Commercial mushroom growing
  • Agaricus brunescens

Crimini (Italian brown)
3-7 d
16
Commercial mushrooms
  • Pleurotus ostreatus oyster mushroom straw,
    sawdust, bagasse and molasses (from sugar
    refining)

17
Commercial mushrooms
  • Shiitake Lentinus edodes
  • Inoculated into oak logs

18
Commercial mushrooms
  • Enoki
  • Flammulina velutipes

http//www.mykoweb.com/CAF/species/Flammulina_velu
tipes.html
19
Commercial mushroom harvest wild mushrooms can
save the forest
  • Morchella, Cantharellus

Value to the forest , mycorrhizae,
environmental monitoring
20
Morels in truffle juice 50g 11.60
Boletus granulatus, Tricholoma terreum, Lactarius
deliciosusGuaranteed freshly picked up 200g
3.95
Boletus edulis 200 g 6.98 
http//www.lefruitier.com/provence-shop/catalog_pr
oducts_with_images.php
21
Cheese manufacture
  • Fungi ? flavour and texture ONLY

22
Roquefort
Sheeps milk ? Penicillium roquefortii
23
Roquefort productionwww.frencheese.co.uk
  • traditional cheese-making process
  • genuine Roquefort cheese ? look for the red sheep
    seal on the packaging
  • sheeps milk is shipped to the cheese-making
    facilities in 40 liter containers, rather than
    tanker trucks, to avoid breaking up the milk-fat
    on the way
  • milk is tested and filtered, but neither
    pasteurized nor homogenized
  • prepared with rennet for two hours
  • whey is drained ? curds are hand-ladled into
    draining molds

24
Roquefort productionwww.frencheese.co.uk
  • whey is drained ? curds are hand-ladled into
    draining molds
  • Penicillium roqueforti culture is added (same
    culture used to make English Stilton)
  • P. roqueforti grown by leaving bread in the caves
    for six to eight weeks until it was consumed by
    the mold ? crumb was then dried to produce a
    powder
  • finished cheeses are stored for a week and
    turned frequently
  • moved to the caves of Cambalou
  • salted and pierced to encourage the growth of the
    mold
  • aged in the caves at least three months

25
Blue cheese options
26
The story of penicillin the contaminant that
changed history
  • Alexander Fleming Staphylococcus aureus
  • Contaminated plate showed a zone of inhibition

Original culture was Penicillium notatum
27
Development of submerged fermenters for aerobic
fungi
Industrial development was moved to Illinois to
protect from WWII (Chain and Florey) Original
culture lost reisolated modified and
selected ? P. chrysogenum and submerged culture
28
Bacillus penicillin
Bacillus
29
Antibiotic resistance
40,000 units total ? 500,000 per day typical
treatment 20 million kg antibiotics / year in US
70 used in agriculture
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