Functional fermented carob milk: probiotic viability and polyphenolic profile

  • Ait Chait Y
  • Gunenc A
  • Bendali F
  • et al.
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Abstract

This study aimed to develop a synbiotic fermented milk with 4% carob powder (CB) as a functional ingredient and using Lactobacillus brevis as a new isolated probiotics strain. Physicochemical characteristics, probiotic viability, total phenolic content (TPC) and antioxidant capacity, antibacterial activity as well as the hypoglycemia activity of carob fermented milk were measured during a cold storage and gastro-intestinal digestion. CB addition to fermented milk improved the growth of Lactobacillus brevis and maintained their viability during the storage period (8 log CFU/g) and after digestion (7 log CFU/g). Carob fermented milk displayed higher TPC and higher antioxidant capacity during the storage. The digestion resulted in the release of bioaccessible phenolics where gallic acid (441%) and (+)-catechin (486%) were the most quantified phenolic compounds; thus, the inhibition of α-amylase (52%), α-glucosidase (37%) activity and higher antibacterial potential. These results demonstrate the potentials of carob fermented milk to be an important source of viable probiotics and bioaccessible polyphenols.

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APA

Ait Chait, Y., Gunenc, A., Bendali, F., & Hosseinian, F. (2021). Functional fermented carob milk: probiotic viability and polyphenolic profile. Journal of Food Bioactives, 114–125. https://doi.org/10.31665/jfb.2021.14273

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