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
CITATION STYLE
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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