Abstract

Response surface methodology (RSM) was used to optimize pizza cheese containing carrot extract. The effects of two important independent variables including soybean oil (5%–20%) and carrot extract (5%–20%) were studied on physicochemical and textural properties of pizza cheese containing carrot extract. According to the results, RSM was successfully used for optimizing formulation of pizza cheese containing carrot juice. Results of this study revealed that oil (A), carrot (B), AB, square term of carrot (B2), B, AB, square term of oil (A2), B2, AB, AB, A2B, A2, A2, A, A2, A2, AB, and AB 2 had the most effect on moisture, acidity, stretch, L*, a*, b*, hardness, meltability, springiness, peroxide value (PV), cohesiveness, chewiness, gumminess, fracture force, adhesiveness force, stiffness, flavor, and overall acceptability, respectively. A formulation upon 20% oil and 10.88% carrot extract was found as the optimal formulation for pizza cheese containing carrot extract. At the optimal formulation, PV, L*, a*, b*, meltability, stretch, cohesiveness, springiness, gumminess, chewiness, adhesive force, flavor, texture, and overall acceptability at the optimum formulation were measured 2.23, 82.51, −3.69, 18.05, 17.86, 85.61, 0.41, 7.874, 23.7, 0.27, 0.61, 3.50, 3.95, and 3.65, respectively.

Highlights

  • Food industry is seeking for approaches to improve organoleptic characteristics and shelf life of products, such as adding some natural preservatives

  • The values of R2, R2-­adj, and R2-­pred revealed that the linear model was more adequate than other models for moisture and fracture force values of pizza cheese samples; for acidity, stretch, a*, peroxide value (PV), cohesiveness, flavor, and overall acceptability, 2FI model was suitable

  • The formulation upon 20% oil and 10.88% carrot extract was found as the optimal formulation for pizza cheese containing carrot extract

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Summary

Introduction

Food industry is seeking for approaches to improve organoleptic characteristics and shelf life of products, such as adding some natural preservatives. Food consumers are seeking natural additives and/or traditional medicines in foods instead of synthetic types. Plants represent a large source of natural bioactive substances that may show health-­promotion effect Giving the World Health Organization (WHO), medicinal plants would be the best source for acquiring a variety of drugs (Lewis & Ausubel, 2006). This evidence gives to support and quantify the importance of screening natural products

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