Reducing Heat Without Impacting Quality: Optimizing Trypsin Inhibitor Inactivation Process in Low-TI Soybean
A soybean meal is a key protein source in human foods and animal feed, yet its digestibility is constrained by endogenous trypsin inhibitors (TIs). Thermal processing is the mainstream tool for TI inactivation, but high-intensity heat treatments increase energy consumption and can potentially denature proteins, diminishing nutritional quality. Reducing the thermal input while maintaining nutritional quality is, therefore, a critical challenge. One promising strategy is the use of soybean...
food science, polyphenols, noodles, flour, starch
Reducing Heat Without Impacting Quality: Optimizing Trypsin Inhibitor Inactivation Process in Low-TI Soybean