Browsing by Author "Masenya, Kedibone"
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- ItemOpen AccessInfluence of Fermentation Conditions (Temperature and Time) on the Physicochemical Properties and Bacteria Microbiota of Amasi(2022-01-28) Maleke, Mpho; Doorsamy, Wesley; Abrahams, Adrian Mark; Adefisoye, Martins Ajibade; Masenya, Kedibone; Adebo, Oluwafemi AyodejiThe aim of this present study was to optimize the fermentation conditions (time and temperature) of amasi (a Southern African fermented dairy product) using response surface methodology (RSM), and to determine the physicochemical properties, as well as the microbial composition, using next generation sequencing. Fermentation time and temperature were optimized to produce different amasi samples and different parameters, including pH, total soluble solids (TSS), total titratable acids (TTA), and consistency. All the variables studied were found to show significant (p ≤ 0.05) changes with increasing fermentation time and temperature. Numerical optimization was used to obtain the optimal fermentation conditions for amasi; based on RSM, it was 32 °C for 140 h, while with k-means clustering, it was 25 °C for 120 h. Under both conditions for the optimal samples, the pH reduced from 6.64 to 3.99, TTA increased from 0.02 to 0.11 (% lactic acid), TSS decreased from 9.47 to 6.67 °Brix, and the consistency decreased from 23 to 15.23 cm/min. Most of the identified bacteria were linked to lactic acid bacteria, with the family Lactobacillaceae being the most predominant in amasi, while in raw milk, Prevotellaceae was the most abundant. The fermentation conditions (time and temperature) had a significant influence on the parameters investigated in this study. Results of this study could provide information for the commercialization of quality amasi.
- ItemOpen AccessPhysicochemical Properties and Bacterial Community Profiling of Optimal Mahewu (A Fermented Food Product) Prepared Using White and Yellow Maize with Different Inocula(2022-10-11) Daji, Grace Abosede; Green, Ezekiel; Abrahams, Adrian; Oyedeji, Ajibola Bamikole; Masenya, Kedibone; Kondiah, Kulsum; Adebo, Oluwafemi AyodejiMahewu is a fermented food product from maize, commonly consumed in Southern Africa. This study investigated the effect of optimizing fermentation (time and temperature) and boiling time of white maize (WM) and yellow maize (YM) mahewu, with the use of the Box–Behnken-response surface methodology (RSM). Fermentation time and temperature as well as boiling time were optimized and pH, total titratable acidity (TTA) and total soluble solids (TSS) determined. Results obtained showed that the processing conditions significantly (p ≤ 0.05) influenced the physicochemical properties. pH values of the mahewu samples ranged between 3.48–5.28 and 3.50–4.20 for YM mahewu and WM mahewu samples, respectively. Reduction in pH values after fermentation coincided with an increase in TTA as well as changes in the TSS values. Using the numerical multi-response optimisation of three investigated responses the optimal fermentation conditions were observed to be 25 °C for 54 h and a boiling time of 19 min for white maize mahewu and 29 °C for 72 h and a boiling time of 13 min for yellow maize mahewu. Thereafter white and yellow maize mahewu were prepared with the optimized conditions using different inocula (sorghum malt flour, wheat flour, millet malt flour or maize malt flour) and the pH, TTA and TSS of the derived mahewu samples determined. Additionally, amplicon sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene was used to characterise the relative abundance of bacterial genera in optimized mahewu samples, malted grains as well as flour samples. Major bacterial genera observed in the mahewu samples included Paenibacillus, Stenotrophomonas, Weissella, Pseudomonas, Lactococcus, Enterococcus, Lactobacillus, Bacillus, Massilia, Clostridium sensu stricto 1, Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, Sanguibacter, Roseococcus, Leuconostoc, Cutibacterium, Brevibacterium, Blastococcus, Sphingomonas and Pediococcus, with variations noted for YM mahewu and WM mahewu. As a result, the variations in physicochemical properties are due to differences in maize type and modification in processing conditions. This study also discovered the existence of variety of bacterial that can be isolated for controlled fermentation of mahewu.