Cover image for Yeasts in food and beverages
Title:
Yeasts in food and beverages
Series:
The Yeast handbook ; v.2
Publication Information:
New York, NY : Springer, 2006
Physical Description:
vi, 453 p.: ill. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9783540283881

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30000010179559 QR151 Y43 2006 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

As a group of microorganisms, yeasts have an enormous impact on food and bev- age production. Scientific and technological understanding of their roles in this p- duction began to emerge in the mid-1800s, starting with the pioneering studies of Pasteur in France and Hansen in Denmark on the microbiology of beer and wine fermentations. Since that time, researchers throughout the world have been engaged in a fascinating journey of discovery and development - learning about the great diversity of food and beverage commodities that are produced or impacted by yeast activity, about the diversity of yeast species associated with these activities, and about the diversity of biochemical, physiological and molecular mechanisms that underpin the many roles of yeasts in food and beverage production. Many excellent books have now been published on yeasts in food and beverage production, and it is reasonable to ask the question - why another book? There are two different approaches to describe and understand the role of yeasts in food and beverage production. One approach is to focus on the commodity and the technology of its processing (e. g. wine fermentation, fermentation of bakery products), and this is the direction that most books on food and beverage yeasts have taken, to date. A second approach is to focus on the yeasts, themselves, and their bi- ogy in the context of food and beverage habitats.


Author Notes

Amparo Querol is a Research scientist in the Food Biotechnology Department of the Institute of Agrochemistry and Food Technology (Spanish Council for Scientific Research) and Assistant Professor Food Science and Technologiy at the University of Valencia, Spain. Her research interests include food biotechnology, genomics, systematics, phylogeny and molecular evolution of industrial yeasts.

Graham Fleet is a Professor within the Food Science and Technology Unit, at the University of New South Wales. He has been active as a teacher and researcher in the fields of food microbiology, food biotechnology and yeast technology since 1975 and has authored numerous publications, reviews and books on the occurrence and significance of yeasts in food and beverage production.


Table of Contents

Graham H. FleetPatrizia Romano and Angela Capece and Lene JespersenM.T. Fernández-Espinar and P. Martorell and R. de Llanos and Amparo QuerolBennie C. ViljoenGraeme M. Walker and Patrick Van DijckEladio Barrio and Sara S. González and Armando Arias and Carmela Belloch and Amparo QuerolUrsula Bond and Anders BlombergJ. Richard Dickinson and Arthur L. KruckebergPierre Strehaiano and Felipe Ramon-Portugal and Patricia TaillandierCharles A. AbbasMalcolm StratfordGraham H. Fleet and Roostita BaliaKevin J. Verstrepen and Paul J. Chambers and Isak S. Pretorius
1 The Commercial and Community Significance of Yeasts in Food and Beverage Productionp. 1
2 Taxonomic and Ecological Diversity of Food and Beverage Yeastsp. 13
3 Molecular Methods to Identify and Characterize Yeasts in Foods and Beveragesp. 55
4 Yeast Ecological Interactions. Yeast-Yeast, Yeast-Bacteria, Yeast-Fungi Interactions and Yeasts as Biocontrol Agentsp. 83
5 Physiological and Molecular Responses of Yeasts to the Environmentp. 111
6 Molecular Mechanisms Involved in the Adaptive Evolution of Industrial Yeastsp. 153
7 Principles and Applications of Genomics and Proteomics in the Analysis of Industrial Yeast Strainsp. 175
8 Carbohydrate Metabolismp. 215
9 Yeasts as Biocatalystsp. 243
10 Production of Antioxidants, Aromas, Colours, Flavours, and Vitamins by Yeastsp. 285
11 Food and Beverage Spoilage Yeastsp. 335
12 The Public Health and Probiotic Significance of Yeasts in Foods and Beveragesp. 381
13 The Development of Superior Yeast Strains for the Foodand Beverage Industries: Challenges, Opportunities and Potential Benefitsp. 399
Indexp. 445