High-Pressure Pasteurization of Oat Okara

Foods. 2023 Nov 9;12(22):4070. doi: 10.3390/foods12224070.

Abstract

The issue of the short microbiological shelf life of residues from the plant-based beverage industry creates a large food waste problem. Today, the oat beverage residue, in this study referred to as oat okara, is generally converted to energy or used as animal feed. High-pressure pasteurization (200 MPa, 400 MPa, and 600 MPa) was applied to oat okara to investigate the effect on shelf life and microbiological activity. A 4-week microbiological storage study was performed and thermal properties, viscosity, and water and oil holding capacities were analyzed. The total aerobic count, including yeast and mold, was significantly reduced (p < 0.05) by 600 MPa after four weeks of storage at 4 °C. The content of lactic acid bacteria after four weeks of storage was low for untreated oat okara (3.2 log CFU/g) but, for 600 MPa, the content remained at the detection limit (2.3 log CFU/g). Conversely, the treatments of 200 MPa and 400 MPa increased the microbial content of the total aerobic count significantly (p < 0.05) after two weeks in comparison to untreated oat okara. The thermal properties of untreated and high-pressure-treated oat okara demonstrated an increase in protein denaturation of the 12S globulin, avenalin, when higher pressure was applied (400-600 MPa). This was also confirmed in the viscosity measurements where a viscosity peak for avenalin was only present for untreated and 200 MPa treated oat okara. The water holding capacity did not change as a function of high-pressure treatment (3.5-3.8 mL/g) except for the treatment at 200 MPa, which was reduced (2.7 mL/g). The oil holding capacity was constant (1.2-1.3 mL/g) after all treatments. High-pressure pasteurization of 600 MPa reduced the microbial content in oat okara resulting in a shelf life of 2-4 weeks. However, more research is required to identify the microorganisms in oat okara to achieve a microbiologically safe product that can be used for food applications.

Keywords: food waste; high-pressure pasteurization; oat okara; shelf life.