Component profiling of soy-sauce-like seasoning produced from different raw materials

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Abstract

Soy sauce is a traditional Japanese umami seasoning commonly made from soybeans, wheat, and salt water. Soy-sauce-like seasoning, made from other raw materials, such as rice and peas, has recently been developed. However, differences in the taste of soy-sauce-like seasoning, depending on the raw materials, have not been evaluated. Component profiling based on GC/MS combined with a paired comparison test were used to investigate the effect of raw materials on seasoning components and umami taste in five grain-based and four bean-based soy-sauce-like seasonings. In a principal component (PC) analysis, grain-based samples and bean-based samples were separated along the PC1 axis (explaining 48.1% of the total variance). Grain-based samples had a higher saccharide content, and bean-based samples had a higher amino acid content. Furthermore, differences in the umami intensity were also observed among sample types. This is the first detailed metabolomics study of the characteristic compounds and umami of a variety of soy-sauce-like seasonings made from different raw materials.

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Yamana, T., Taniguchi, M., Nakahara, T., Ito, Y., Okochi, N., Putri, S. P., & Fukusaki, E. (2020). Component profiling of soy-sauce-like seasoning produced from different raw materials. Metabolites, 10(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo10040137

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