chicken broth
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Biosensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 511
Author(s):  
Daniela A. Oliveira ◽  
Suleiman Althawab ◽  
Eric S. McLamore ◽  
Carmen L. Gomes

Bacterial contamination in food-processing facilities is a critical issue that leads to outbreaks compromising the integrity of the food supply and public health. We developed a label-free and rapid electrochemical biosensor for Listeria monocytogenes detection using a new one-step simultaneous sonoelectrodeposition of platinum and chitosan (CHI/Pt) to create a biomimetic nanostructure that actuates under pH changes. The XPS analysis shows the effective co-deposition of chitosan and platinum on the electrode surface. This deposition was optimized to enhance the electroactive surface area by 11 times compared with a bare platinum–iridium electrode (p < 0.05). Electrochemical behavior during chitosan actuation (pH-stimulated osmotic swelling) was characterized with three different redox probes (positive, neutral, and negative charge) above and below the isoelectric point of chitosan. These results showed that using a negatively charged redox probe led to the highest electroactive surface area, corroborating previous studies of stimulus–response polymers on metal electrodes. Following this material characterization, CHI/Pt brushes were functionalized with aptamers selective for L. monocytogenes capture. These aptasensors were functional at concentrations up to 106 CFU/mL with no preconcentration nor extraneous reagent addition. Selectivity was assessed in the presence of other Gram-positive bacteria (Staphylococcus aureus) and with a food product (chicken broth). Actuation led to improved L. monocytogenes detection with a low limit of detection (33 CFU/10 mL in chicken broth). The aptasensor developed herein offers a simple fabrication procedure with only one-step deposition followed by functionalization and rapid L. monocytogenes detection, with 15 min bacteria capture and 2 min sensing.


Foods ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 2814
Author(s):  
Manli Wu ◽  
Wangang Zhang ◽  
Xixi Shen ◽  
Wei Wang

Chinese chicken broth is well known for its outstanding nutritional value and flavor, widely consumed in China. This study was designed to develop a sensitive and accurate high-performance liquid chromatography-variable wavelength detector (HPLC-VWD) method to simultaneously determine purines and uric acid in Chinese chicken broth for gout and hyperuricemia dietary management. Chromatographic separation was performed on an Agilent TC-C18 (2) column (4.6 mm × 250 mm, 5.0 µm), using 0.02 M KH2PO4 (pH 4.0) as a mobile phase. Sample pretreatment was optimized to enable the extraction of all analytes from Chinese chicken broth. The optimal pretreatment conditions were chicken broth-60% trifluoroacetic acid (TFA)/20% formic acid (FA) (1:1, v/v) in a volume ratio of 1:3 and hydrolysis for 40 min at 85 °C in a water bath. The limits of detection (LODs) and limits of quantification (LOQs) of the purines and uric acid were 0.58–1.71 µg/L and 1.92–5.70 µg/L, respectively. The recoveries were 91–101%, with the relative standard deviations (RSDs) lower than 3%. The complete method has been successfully applied to determine purines and uric acid in various Chinese chicken soups obtained from different provinces in China.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 15-21
Author(s):  
Paddy Ainebyona ◽  
Julia Kigozi ◽  
Ivan M. Mukisa

Instant soups are preferred by consumers for their flexibility in preparation and longer storage life. Extrusion cooking is one of the recent developments reported to improve nutrient content of soups. However, little information is available regarding use of extrusion cooking in development of banana vegetable soups. This study investigated the use of extrusion cooking in production of instant banana-vegetable soup. The moisture content was varied using a chicken broth prepared from chicken wings and spicy vegetables (thyme, rosemary, parsley, etc.) to improve flavor and acceptability of the extruded product. The mixture of Banana : Amaranths: pumpkins : mushrooms : carrots =40.84:40.84:9.24:3.76:5.34 was extruded at different moisture content (10–20%) and barrel temperature (100-180°C) and the effect on product responses; reconstitution potential, vitamin A retention, vitamin C, total fat among other parameters were investigated at constant screw speed (45Hz) and feed rate (50 Hz) to produce an instant banana-vegetables soup. The optimum extrusion temperature and moisture were 123.3oC and 10.122%, respectively. The optimal product had a mixture formulation of 60% extruded flour and 50% vegetable flour with chicken level at 16.6%. The overall acceptability score, fiber content, fat content, ash content, vitamin C and vitamin A values of the optimum flour were 7.1, 6.8%, 11.2%, 4.92%, 19.4 g/100 g and 1.21 mg/100 g, respectively.


Author(s):  
Silvia Barbaresi ◽  
Laura Blancquaert ◽  
Zoran Nikolovski ◽  
Sarah de Jager ◽  
Mathew Wilson ◽  
...  

Abstract Background chicken meat extract is a popular functional food in Asia. It is rich in the bioactive compounds carnosine and anserine, two histidine-containing dipeptides (HCD). Studies suggest that acute pre-exercise ingestion of chicken extracts has important applications towards exercise performance and fatigue control, but the evidence is equivocal. This study aimed to evaluate the ergogenic potential of the pre-exercise ingestion of a homemade chicken broth (CB) vs a placebo soup on a short-lasting, high-intensity cycling exercise. Methods fourteen men participated in this double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover intervention study. Subjects ingested either CB, thereby receiving 46.4 mg/kg body weight of HCD, or a placebo soup (similar in taste without HCD) 40 min before an 8 min cycling time trial (TT) was performed. Venous blood samples were collected at arrival (fasted), before exercise and at 5 min recovery. Plasma HCD were measured with UPLC-MS/MS and glutathione (in red blood cells) was measured through HPLC. Capillary blood samples were collected at different timepoints before and after exercise. Results a significant improvement (p = 0.033; 5.2%) of the 8 min TT mean power was observed after CB supplementation compared to placebo. Post-exercise plasma carnosine (p <  0.05) and anserine (p <  0.001) was significantly increased after CB supplementation and not following placebo. No significant effect of CB supplementation was observed either on blood glutathione levels, nor on capillary blood analysis. Conclusions oral CB supplementation improved the 8 min TT performance albeit it did not affect the acid-base balance or oxidative status parameters. Further research should unravel the potential role and mechanisms of HCD, present in CB, in this ergogenic approach.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvia Barbaresi ◽  
Laura Blancquaert ◽  
Zoran Nikolovski ◽  
Sarah de Jager ◽  
Mathew Wilson ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: chicken meat extract is a popular functional food in Asia. It is rich in the bioactive compounds carnosine and anserine, two histidine-containing dipeptides (HCD). Studies suggest that acute pre-exercise ingestion of chicken extracts has important applications towards exercise performance and fatigue control, but the evidence is equivocal. This study aimed to evaluate the ergogenic potential of the pre-exercise ingestion of a homemade chicken broth (CB) vs a placebo soup on a short-lasting, high-intensity cycling exercise. Methods: fourteen men participated in this double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover intervention study. Subjects ingested either CB, thereby receiving 46.4 mg/kg body weight of HCD, or a placebo soup (similar in taste without HCD) 40 min before an 8 min cycling time trial (TT) was performed. Venous blood samples were collected at arrival (fasted), before exercise and at 5 min recovery. Plasma HCD were measured with UPLC-MS/MS and glutathione (in red blood cells) was measured through HPLC. Capillary blood samples were collected at different timepoints before and after exercise. Results: a significant improvement (p=0.033; 5.2%) of the 8 min TT mean power was observed after CB supplementation compared to placebo. Post-exercise plasma carnosine (p<0.05) and anserine (p<0.001) was significantly increased after CB supplementation and not following placebo. No significant effect of CB supplementation was observed either on blood glutathione levels, nor on capillary blood analysis. Conclusions: oral CB supplementation improved the 8 min TT performance albeit it did not affect the acid-base balance or oxidative status parameters. Further research should unravel the potential role and mechanisms of HCD, present in CB, in this ergogenic approach.


2020 ◽  
Vol 333 ◽  
pp. 127463
Author(s):  
Jun Qi ◽  
Ying Xu ◽  
Xiao-fei Xie ◽  
Wen-wen Zhang ◽  
Hu-hu Wang ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
silvia barbaresi ◽  
Laura Blancquaert ◽  
Zoran Nikolovski ◽  
Sarah de Jager ◽  
Mathew Wilson ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: chicken meat extract is a popular functional food in Asia. It is rich in the bioactive compounds carnosine and anserine, two histidine-containing dipeptides (HCD). Studies suggest that acute pre-exercise ingestion of chicken extracts has important applications towards exercise performance and fatigue control, but the evidence is equivocal. This study aimed to evaluate the ergogenic potential of the pre-exercise ingestion of a homemade chicken broth (CB) vs a placebo soup on a short-lasting, high-intensity cycling exercise. Methods: fourteen men participated in this double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover intervention study. Subjects ingested either CB, thereby receiving 46.4 mg/kg body weight of HCD, or a placebo soup (similar in taste without HCD) 40 min before an 8 min cycling time trial (TT) was performed. Venous blood samples were collected at arrival (fasted), before exercise and at 5 min recovery. Plasma HCD were measured with UPLC-MS/MS and glutathione (in red blood cells) was measured through HPLC. Capillary blood samples were collected at different timepoints before and after exercise. Results: a significant improvement (p=0.033; 5.2%) of the 8 min TT mean power was observed after CB supplementation compared to placebo. Post-exercise plasma carnosine (p<0.05) and anserine (p<0.001) was significantly increased after CB supplementation and not following placebo. No significant effect of CB supplementation was observed either on blood glutathione levels, nor on capillary blood analysis. Conclusions: oral CB supplementation improved the 8 min TT performance albeit it did not affect the acid-base balance or oxidative status parameters. Further research should unravel the potential role and mechanisms of HCD, present in CB, in this ergogenic approach.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvia Barbaresi ◽  
Laura Blancquaert ◽  
Zoran Nikolovski ◽  
Sarah de Jager ◽  
Mathew Wilson ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Chicken meat extract is a popular functional food in Asia. It is rich in the bioactive compounds carnosine and anserine, two histidine-containing dipeptides (HCD). Studies suggest that acute pre-exercise ingestion of chicken extracts has important applications towards exercise performance and fatigue control, but the evidence is equivocal. This study aimed to evaluate the ergogenic potential of the pre-exercise ingestion of a homemade chicken broth (CB) vs a placebo soup on a short-lasting, high-intensity cycling exercise. Methods Fourteen men participated in this double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover intervention study. Subjects ingested either CB, thereby receiving 46.4 mg/kg body weight of HCD, or a placebo soup (similar in taste without HCD) 40min before an 8min cycling time trial (TT) was performed. Venous blood samples were collected at arrival (fasted), before exercise and at 5min recovery. Plasma HCD were measured with UPLC-MS/MS and glutathione (in red blood cells) was measured through HPLC. Capillary blood samples were collected at different timepoints before and after exercise. Results A significant improvement (p=0.033; 5.2%) of the 8min TT mean power was observed after CB supplementation compared to placebo. Post-exercise plasma carnosine (p<0.05) and anserine (p<0.001) was significantly increased after CB supplementation and not following placebo. No significant effect of CB supplementation was observed either on blood glutathione levels, nor on capillary blood analysis. Conclusions Oral CB supplementation improved the 8min TT performance albeit it did not affect the acid-base balance or oxidative status parameters. Further research should unravel the potential role and mechanisms of HCD, present in CB, in this ergogenic approach.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. p153
Author(s):  
Y. Datta

This paper follows the path of eight studies of U.S. markets: Men’s Shaving Cream, Beer, Shampoo, Shredded/Grated Cheese, Refrigerated Orange Juice, Men’s Razor-Blades, Women’s Razor-Blades, and Toothpaste.Porter associates high market share with cost leadership strategy which is based on the idea of competing on a price that is lower than that of the competition. However, customer-perceived quality—not low cost—should be the underpinning of competitive strategy, because it is far more vital to long-term competitive position and profitability than any other factor. So, a superior alternative is to offer better quality vs. the competition.In most consumer markets a business seeking market share leadership should try to serve the middle class by competing in the mid-price segment; and offering quality better than that of the competition: at a price somewhat higher, to signify an image of quality, and to ensure that the strategy is both profitable and sustainable in the long run. Quality, however, is a complex concept that consumers generally find hard to understand. So, they often use relative price, and a brand’s reputation, as a symbol of quality.In 2008 the U.S. retail sales for the Canned Soup market were $3.44 Billion. The market leader Campbell had a commanding share of 52.5%, followed by a far-distant second Progresso with a share of 17.8%. A notable feature of this market was the tremendous variety of soups, albeit many with minor variations, that equaled the unbelievable figure of 1011!We focused our attention on the two best-selling varieties of soup: (1) Chicken Broth canned, the market leader, with 11.1% market share, and (2) Chicken Noodle Soup canned, with a 7.4% share. Within each variety we chose the can-size range with the highest sales.Using Hierarchical Cluster Analysis, we tested Hypotheses I that a market leader is likely to compete in the mid-price segment. Employing U.S. retail sales data for 2008 and 2007, we found that for both Chicken Broth and Chicken Noodle Soup—for 2008 and 2007—the market leader Campbell was a member of the mid-price segment.For Hypothesis II we wanted to test the proposition that the unit price of the market leader would be somewhat higher than that of the nearest competition. For Chicken Broth we could not test this hypothesis because Progresso, the runner-up, could not be included in this analysis.However, for Chicken Noodle Soup the results did not support the hypothesis because Progresso happened not to be a part of the mid-price, but that of the premium segment.Finally, we discovered four strategic groups in the industry.


ACS Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (7) ◽  
pp. 1900-1911 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raquel R. A. Soares ◽  
Robert G. Hjort ◽  
Cicero C. Pola ◽  
Kshama Parate ◽  
Efraim L. Reis ◽  
...  

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