Goat milk with and without stabilizing salt was subjected to in-container and UHT sterilization. Heat stability was assessed by measuring the amount of sediment in the milk. Without stabilizing salts, goat milk usually produced less sediment when subjected to in-container sterilization compared with UHT processing. Addition of stabilizing salts up to 12.8. m. M resulted in a progressive increase in sediment for in-container sterilization. In contrast, adding stabilizing salts at 6.4. m. M initially reduced sediment formation in UHT-treated milk but addition of stabilizing salts at 12.8. m. M increased sediment formation. Adding stabilizing salts to goat milk increased pH, decreased ionic calcium, and increased ethanol stability. Adding up to 2. m. M calcium chloride increased sediment formation more after UHT treatment than after in-container sterilization. These results suggest that no single mechanism or set of reactions causes milk to produce sediment during heating and that the favored pathway is different for UHT and in-container sterilization processes. Poor heat stability could be induced both by increasing ionic calcium and by decreasing it. Ethanol stability is not a good indicator of heat stability for in-container sterilization, but it may be for UHT sterilization, if milk does not enter the region of poor heat stability found at low concentrations of ionic calcium. © 2012 American Dairy Science Association.
CITATION STYLE
Chen, B. Y., Grandison, A. S., & Lewis, M. J. (2012). Comparison of heat stability of goat milk subjected to ultra-high temperature and in-container sterilization. Journal of Dairy Science, 95(3), 1057–1063. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2011-4367
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