Abstract

Three types of tilapia scale gelatins (hot water-pretreated gelatin, HWG; acetic acid-pretreated gelatin, AAG; and pepsin enzyme-pretreated gelatin, PEG) were extracted and their gel strength, foaming properties, and emulsifying properties were analyzed. They had different gel strength values: AAG (370 ± 10 g Bloom) > HWG (320 ± 10 g Bloom) > PEG (280 ± 10 g Bloom). The creaming index values of tilapia scale gelatin-stabilized fish oil-loaded emulsions were dependent on gelatin type (HWG ≈ AAG > PEG) at low gelatin concentration (2 mg/mL), whereas they were similar and low (8–10 %) at high gelatin concentration (10 mg/mL). Extraction methods had no consistently significant effects on the gelatin foaming properties. In summary, tilapia scale gelatins had better gel strength and foaming properties and similar or even better emulsifying properties than mammalian gelatins. Therefore, tilapia scales could be a potential source of gelatins to replace mammalian gelatins.

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