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      Unraveling umami complexity: From exploring umami peptides in fermented soybean curd to molecular elucidation of taste mechanisms

      , , , , , ,
      Food Bioscience
      Elsevier BV

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          New insight into umami receptor, umami/umami-enhancing peptides and their derivatives: A review

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            A Chinese fermented soybean food.

            Sufu or furu is a fermented soybean product originating in China. It is a cheese-like product with a spreadable creamy consistency and a pronounced flavour. Sufu is a popular side dish consumed mainly with breakfast rice or steamed bread. It has a long history and written records date back to the Wei Dynasty (220-265 AD). Sufu is made by fungal solid state fermentation of tofu (soybean curd) followed by aging in brine containing salt and alcohol. The present review is based on scientific data published in Chinese and international sources. Several types of sufu can be distinguished, according to processing method or according to colour and flavour. Choice of processing can result in mould fermented sufu, naturally fermented sufu, bacterial fermented sufu, or enzymatically ripened sufu. Depending on the choice of dressing mixture, red, white or grey sufu may be obtained. The stages of the process are discussed and include the preparation of tofu, the preparation of pehtze, salting and ripening. Fungal starters include Actinomucor spp., Mucor spp. and Rhizopus spp. The chemical composition is discussed with particular reference to the proximate composition, the amino acid content and profile, as well as the volatile flavour components of various types of sufu.
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              Molecular docking and simulation of the synergistic effect between umami peptides, monosodium glutamate and taste receptor T1R1/T1R3

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Food Bioscience
                Food Bioscience
                Elsevier BV
                22124292
                June 2024
                June 2024
                : 59
                : 103951
                Article
                10.1016/j.fbio.2024.103951
                8db0db28-0dcd-4132-93fe-5f9409286735
                © 2024

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