The present work studied the production of carbonyl compounds and saturated volatile free fatty acids by pure cultures of Streptococcus thermophilus and Lactobacillus bulgaricus, and by starter cultures for Bulgarian yogurt during cultivation and cooling. The mixed cultures formed volatile aromatic compounds more actively than the pure cultures. A guiding factor in the preparation of the starter cultures was the biochemical activity of Lactobacillus bulgaricus in synthesizing the major carbonyl compounds, acetaldehyde, diacetyl and the volatile fatty acids C2–C10. The activity of the yogurt cultures in synthesizing carbonyl compounds was at its highest during milk coagulation and cooling, up to 7 h. However, maximum concentration was reached by 22–31 h. In the cooled 22–h starter cultures, acetaldehyde predominated (1415.0–1734.2 μg per 100 g) followed by diacetyl (165.0–202.0 μg per 100 g), acetoin (170.0–221.0 μg per 100 g), acetone (66.0–75.5 μg per 100 g), ethanol (58.0 μg per 100 g), and butanone-2 (3.6–3.8 μg per 100 g). The thermophilic streptococcus and lactobacillus cultures, and the starter cultures contained predominantly acetic, butyric and caproic acids.
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Received 19 June 1997/ Accepted in revised form 10 January 1998
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Beshkova, D., Simova, E., Frengova, G. et al. Production of flavour compounds by yogurt starter cultures. J Ind Microbiol Biotech 20, 180–186 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.jim.2900504
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.jim.2900504