Abstract

Water-in-oil (W/O) emulsion is promising to design fat-reduced foods for 3D printing. In this study, oleogel-based W/O emulsion containing 65% water fraction was prepared by sunflower wax (SW, 1.0 wt%) and soybean phosphatidylethanolamine (SP, 0.5 wt%) with stability exceeding 30 days. Besides reducing interfacial tension, from X-ray diffraction and rheological results, SP was considered co-oleogelator to change the crystal habit of SW to enhance the external SW-based oleogel structure. The strong external oleogel structure was not only good for reducing droplets movements to improve physical stability, but facilitating the molding and supporting abilities of the emulsion gel in 3D printing. Based on rheological measurements, the emulsion gels were shown improved printing performance with SP increasing: extrusion (shear-thinning behavior), recovery (excellent thixotropy), and self-supporting (sufficient storage modulus and deformation resistance). In 3D printing, the emulsion gels with growing SP were displayed better shape retention and allowed printing the designs with more delicate and vivid features. This study provided new insight for W/O emulsion formation using natural ingredients for 3D printing to create fat-reduced foods.

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