Characterization of plant-based meat alternatives blended with anthocyanins, chlorophyll, and various edible natural pigments

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Abstract

The objective of this study was to characterize the physicochemical, proximal, textural, and visual properties of plant-based meat (PBM) patties blended with natural pigments such as anthocyanin from black beans, Fe-chlorophyll from spinach, and edible red and purple pigments. A comparison was made between these plant-based pigments and the pigments derived from animal-based sources (control). The values of the color coordinates of the developed patties were broadly distributed (L* [lightness], a* [redness], and b* [yellowness] of raw PBMs: 34–53, 2–25, and 4–27; steamed: 29–42, 4–21, and 5–25; and cooked: 28–43, 5–19, and 9–21, respectively). The proximate chemical analysis revealed no (P >.05) significant difference between the PBMs and the control in terms of moisture (63.28–61.25), crude protein (20.98–19.17) crude fat (3.19–2.92) and ash content (3.80–1.71). Nevertheless, significant differences (P

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Bakhsh, A., Cho, C., Baritugo, K. A., Kim, B., Ullah, Q., Rahman, A., & Park, S. (2023). Characterization of plant-based meat alternatives blended with anthocyanins, chlorophyll, and various edible natural pigments. International Journal of Food Properties, 26(1), 1546–1565. https://doi.org/10.1080/10942912.2023.2224533

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