Food Supplement Reduces Fat, Improves Flavor
Consumer, Home, and Recreation
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution
During the Mercury missions, astronauts ate terrible
food: freeze-dried powders and semi-
liquids in aluminum tubes. Decades later, though, astronauts
now have meals prepared by celebrity chefs and access
to everyday items like shrimp cocktail, stir-fried chicken,
and fettuccine alfredo. While
the culinary selection has improved, the developers of
these gourmet delights are still faced with a number
of challenges.
Space foods, which can be available in rehydratable,
thermostabilized, irradiated, and natural forms, are
tested for their nutritional value, appeal to the senses,
storability, and packaging. The foods are also tested
to ensure that they are low in weight and mass, require
little energy to prepare for eating, have a minimum of
9 months shelf life for shuttle missions and 1 year for
use on the International Space Station (ISS), and are
stored at room temperature.
Additional challenges include the need to develop foods
and equipment that take up very little space, are easy
to operate and clean, and require minimal water use,
while also creating minimal air pollution and odors,
which can be hazardous to the health and well-being of
astronauts. The foods must be crumb-free to eliminate
excess floating particles. Space foods must also be free
of pathogenic microbes and create minimum waste and mess.
Finally, space foods have to taste good, while still
managing to be healthy. Toward this effort, NASA testing
helped in the development of a revolutionary new fat
substitute that cuts calories and extends shelf life.
Partnership
The NASA Glenn Garrett Morgan Commercialization Initiative
(GMCI) is a program for small, minority-owned, and woman-owned
businesses that can benefit from access to NASA resources.
GMCI provides services that enable companies to grow
and strengthen their business by leveraging NASA technology,
expertise, and programs.
|
Diversified
Services Corporation developed and commercialized
a new nutritional fat replacement and flavor enhancement
product with assistance from NASA. |
Diversified Services Corporation, a minority-owned business
based out of Cleveland, Ohio, was able to take advantage
of this NASA program for technology acquisition and development,
and for introductions to potential customers and strategic
partners, such as the NASA Food Technology Commercial
Space Center, at Iowa State University (the center closed
December 31, 2005), for taste tests and performance studies.
Fresh ground beef (90-percent lean) was used to prepare
hamburger patties formulated with or without 10-percent
fat substitute. Hamburger patties without the added fat
substitute served as the control in each experiment.
Patties were weighed for evaluation of cooking yield,
and then cooked to an internal temperature of 72 °C.
The cooked product with or without fat substitute was
rapidly cooled, and then subjected to freeze drying or
irradiation in retort pouches to NASA specifications.
Changes in volatile profile during storage, and sensory
properties were determined. Addition of 10-percent fat
substitute did not influence the sensory characteristics
of the ready-to-eat hamburger beef patties or dramatically
change its volatile profile after 30-day storage.
With the GMCI assistance, the company developed and commercialized
a new nutritional fat replacement and flavor enhancement
product it had licensed from the U.S. Department of Agriculture
and is now marketing it through its subsidiary, H.F.
Food Technologies Inc.
Product Outcome
The Nutrigras fat substitute is available for commercial
applications and helps to satisfy the body’s desire for
the taste and mouth feel of fatty foods, even though
the body does not actually need these foods—in fact,
many people need fewer high-fat foods in their diets.
With obesity on the verge of outweighing smoking as the
number one cause of preventable death, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention are showing rapid rises
in the prevalence of children at severe weight levels;
and while the American diet continues to be reliant on
large quantities of high-fat foods, nutritionists are
searching for solutions.
Nutrigras is one such solution. It is a stable emulsion
of 9-percent vegetable oil and 62-percent water that
has been formed by turbid excess steam jet cooking and
made stable with microencapsulation in a starch solution
that holds the emulsion steady. It is available in liquid,
gel, or dry form and can be easily customized to the
specific needs of the food manufacturer. When constituted,
it looks and tastes just like real fat, but it is significantly
healthier.
It is primarily intended for use as a partial replacement
for animal fat in beef patties and other normally high-fat
meat products, but can also be used in soups, sauces,
bakery items, and desserts.
Nutrigras is intended to be used as a direct, pound-
for-pound replacement of fat, and since it is only
9-percent fat, it is possible to produce products that
have 90-percent less fat than their full-fat counterparts.
It contains 80-percent fewer calories per gram than fat.
In addition to the nutritional benefits, the fat replacement
has added industrial benefits. First, it costs less than
the food it replaces and can help manufacturers reduce
material costs. Secondly, in precooked products, Nutrigras
can increase moisture content, which increases product
yield. For example, in research on cooked beef, the Nutrigras-enhanced
product shrank 10-percent less than the beef that had
not received the additive.
|
The
Nutrigras food supplement creates food that is
more moist, more tender, and more flavorful than
its full-fat counterpart, and 1 pound of the supplement
replaces
1 pound of animal fat. |
It is healthy, has wide-spread applicability, and is
more cost effective than using full-fat products; but
really, how does it taste? That is the big breakthrough.
With Nutrigras, the finished product is more moist and
tender. Quantitative consumer testing conducted by the
company indicated that a beef patty made with Nutrigras
was actually preferred to the full-fat beef patty. The
unique structure of Nutrigras allows for improved flavor
delivery. The construction of Nutrigras is receptive
to the addition of flavors that can be carried and then
released in a “burst” when consumed. This can be positioned
as a point of difference for food manufacturers.
The company has been working on a number of specific
applications, with the primary focus on beef, pork, chicken,
and turkey. Work has also been done to enhance the performance
of various baked goods, ice creams, ice cream novelties,
soups, sauces, and salad dressings.
Development work and testing has been completed
on beef patties. In beef, optimal results have been obtained
when converting 80/20 ground beef (80-percent lean meat/20-percent
fat) to 80/15/5 (80-percent
lean meat/15-percent Nutrigras/5-percent fat.) Product
testing is currently underway on pork sausage and chicken,
and one customer is currently working on a turkey enhancement.
Nutrigras can be used to add flavors to a variety of
baked goods, resulting in reduced fat and calories while
enhancing flavor. Moreover, preliminary research has
indicated the potential for product stability benefits
from Nutrigras. Baked goods are left moister, better
tasting, and the resultant product contains less fat
and fewer calories.
Ice cream can be made with less heavy cream by replacing
a portion of the cream with Nutrigras. Overall costs
are reduced (cream is more costly than Nutrigras), and
the flavor profile is enhanced and improved. In addition,
unique flavors can be obtained through customized formulations.
Nutrigras can act as a stabilizer and reduce the use
of extraneous gums and emulsifiers that are expensive
and clutter product labels. Nutrigras has also demonstrated
the ability to reduce the negative freeze/thaw characteristics
of conventional ice cream.
Additionally, soups can be flavor enhanced, better tasting,
and have improved mouth feel. Low-fat sauces and salad
dressings can be improved in similar fashions.
The company has been able to repay the help provided
by NASA by contributing to the Space Agency’s astronaut
diet. The Nutrigras fat substitute can be used as a flavor
enhancer and shelf-life extender for use on the ISS.
Nutrigras™
is a trademark of H.F. Food Technologies Inc.
|