Food Industry
Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedSavory flavors heat up stews
Prepared Foods, Feb, 2002 by Laura A. Brandt
Stews are traditionally slow-cooked for maximum flavor. Consumer-friendly, frozen prepared stews contain flavoring ingredients that simulate slow-cooked flavor. Savory ingredient synergies, details on yeast-based ingredients and formulation tips are provided.
A stew generally refers to a dish with meat, vegetables and a thick soup-like broth. Stewing helps tenderize tough pieces of meat and allows the different ingredient flavors to marry or blend deliciously.
Stews conjure up images of home-cooked meals simmering for hours on a Sunday afternoon. However, time-pressed consumers can now come home from work any day of the week to thaw frozen meals in the microwave. In a short time, they can have satisfying stews--almost like Mom used to make.
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Formulators can create tasty prepared stews by adding flavors and flavor enhancers. The challenge is selecting the right blend of these ingredients for savory applications that look and taste like homemade foods.
Flavorful Options
Stews derive their flavor from long, slow cooking. Ingredients generally include meat, fish, or chicken, vegetables, and stock. Stock can be canned or prepared by simmering bones, meat, fish, or chicken parts, vegetables, spices, and salt for several hours. Through this "kitchen chemistry" process, basic flavor building blocks are extracted. The entire stew-making process can take anywhere from two to six hours. Few consumers have time for this.
Flavor suppliers provide an almost endless variety of meat and savory flavors that enhance overall flavor and provide a home-cooked taste to a frozen meal. Reaction flavor technology allows flavor houses to create savory flavors with many nuances by combining amino acids, reducing sugars, nucleotides, yeast extracts and other ingredients, and reacting them together.
For example, a beef flavor can contain notes such as roasted, smoked, fried, sauteed, bloody, fatty, or au jus. Poultry flavors are available in light or dark meat, and may contain various levels of skin notes, in addition to some of the previously mentioned flavor attributes. Savory broth flavors and fatty flavors and ingredients also are available. Many flavors are obtainable in dry, liquid or paste forms.
In addition to true meat flavors, flavor potentiators such as salt, yeast-based ingredients, monosodium glutamate (MSG), hydrolyzed vegetable protein (HVP), and 5' nucleotides (e.g. disodium inosinate and disodium guanylate), can enhance meaty and vegetable-type notes. The synergy between nucleotides and MSG, or glutamate-containing ingredients, is well known.
"Today's consumers want more intense flavors--yeast and yeast-extracts intensify and round out flavors, and provide truer meaty notes in the appropriate application--such as stews," says Franny Hildabrand, manager, technical services, Provesta Flavor Ingredients, Bartlesville, Okla. "Frozen products today have come a long way from the old packaged items of the 1960s that contained mainly HVP as a flavor." HVP consists of sodium chloride, glutamic and various amino acids.
Foods cooked in steam kettles may not achieve the full meaty and roasted flavors that a manufacturer wants, Hildabrand points out. Flavors and flavor enhancers provide the missing link to homemade savory taste.
Yeast-based flavor enhancers give a boost to the overall flavor of a system including salt perception, green herb and brown spice notes, and spice heat. They also contribute umami, the fifth basic taste that is often described as brothy or savory. They work in synergy with nucleotides and MSG. With their high flavor strength, low levels can be used for enhancement.
Yeast-Based Ingredients
Yeast-derived flavors and flavor enhancers manufactured from mostly Saccharomyces species and (Torula), have become key tools in savory flavor systems. There are three basic forms of inactive yeast--inactive dried yeast, autolyzed yeast, and yeast extract.
Inactive dried yeasts are generally manufactured from Torula and are labeled as "Torula yeast." Inactive dried yeasts find application as flavor enhancers, clean label MSG replacers and nutritional ingredients.
Autolysis involves self-digestion of the yeast cells where the yeasts' own enzymes break down the cells under carefully controlled conditions. "Autolysates" comprise the entire contents that result from this process. Yeast extract is the soluble portion of the autolysate after cencrifugation and removal of the insoluble cell wall. The ingredients are concentrated into a paste and, subsequently, can be dried. These ingredients are labeled as "autolyzed yeast extract" (USDA) or "yeast extract" (FDA). If the cell wall is not removed the product is "autolyzed yeast".
Through the processing of autolyzed yeast and yeast extract, water-soluble flavor-enhancing compounds such as peptides, amino acids (including glutamic acid), monosaccharides, nucleotides and salts, are released. Some specialty yeast extracts contain higher levels of nucleotides. Through drying processes, yeast extracts can take on enhanced flavor characters of their own such as meaty and roasted notes.
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