Investigating Key Volatile Compound Diffusion in Cocoa Beans during Yeast Fermentation-like Incubation.
J Agric Food Chem
; 72(28): 15788-15800, 2024 Jul 17.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38976795
ABSTRACT
An experimental setup was devised to investigate the permeability of cocoa bean seed coat and pulp to key volatile compounds during fermentation. Four labeled compounds (ethyl acetate-d3, ethyl octanoate-d15, 2-phenylethanol-d5, linalool-d5) and 2 unlabeled (beta-damascenone, delta-decalactone) were chosen for the investigation. The beans (cotyledons), depulped beans, or pulped beans were immersed separately in a concentrated solution of these volatile compounds at 36 or 46 °C for durations ranging from 3 to 120 h. The imbibed beans were dissected, and the cotyledons were analyzed by SPME-GC/MS. The diffusion of volatile compounds from the external solution to the seed was categorized into three groups (1) not diffusible (ethyl octanoate-d15); (2) semidiffusible (ethyl acetate); and (3) totally diffusible (2-phenylethanol-d5, linalool-d5, beta-damascenone, delta-decalactone). The impact of the yeast on volatile compound diffusion was also investigated by immerging the pulped beans into the same concentrated solution with a yeast starter. Results highlighted the positive role of yeast in the diffusion of volatile compounds. The starter positively contributed to volatile compound diffusion after a transition phase occurring at approximately 48 h of fermentation, enriching the cocoa beans with key aromatic volatile compounds.
Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Seeds
/
Cacao
/
Volatile Organic Compounds
/
Fermentation
Language:
En
Journal:
J Agric Food Chem
Year:
2024
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
France
Country of publication:
United States