Abstract

The aim of this work was to study how heat treatment, the type of starter culture, incubation temperature, and storage time can affect the physicochemical characteristics of stirred yoghurt. A four-factor experimental design was used for data analysis. Yoghurt milk was heated at 95 °C for 5 min or 130 °C for 80 s. Yoghurts were produced with three different starter cultures that had been incubated at 37, 42 or 45 °C and stored at 4 °C for 15 days. Visual roughness, number of grains, perimeter of grains, storage modulus, and yield stress all decreased when heating temperature was increased, when an exopolysaccharide-producing starter culture was used, or when incubation temperature was decreased. Storage time did not affect any of the physicochemical properties of yoghurt, except for the pH.

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