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Process for producing proteinrich product, fibrous product and/or vegetable oil from brewer's spent grain

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专利汇可以提供Process for producing proteinrich product, fibrous product and/or vegetable oil from brewer's spent grain专利检索,专利查询,专利分析的服务。并且A process for producing a protein-rich product and/or a fibrous product is disclosed which includes the steps of pressing brewer's spent grain (BSG) in a wet state, and sieving the resulting pressed BSG in the presece of water to thereby separate it into a protein-containing fraction and a fibrous fraction.,下面是Process for producing proteinrich product, fibrous product and/or vegetable oil from brewer's spent grain专利的具体信息内容。

1. A process for producing a protein-rich product and/or a fibrous product, which comprises the steps of pressing BSG in a wet state, and sieving the resulting pressed BSG in the presence of water to thereby separate it into a fraction of a protein-containing product and a fraction of a fibrous product.2. A process as set forth in claim 1, wherein said fraction of the protein-containing product into a fraction of fine particulate protein-contaning product and a fraction of coarse particulate protein-contaning product.3. A process as set forth in claim 1, wherein said flat-pressing treatment is preceded by sieving BSG.4. A process as set forth in claim 1, wherein said pressing treatment is conducted in a roll mill.5. A process as set forth in claim 1, which additionally com­prises extracting said fraction of the protein-containing product with a solvent, to thereby separate said fraction into a defatted protein and a vegetable oil.6. A process for producing a protein-rich product, which comprises the steps of pressing BSG in a wet state, then sieving the resulting pressed BSG in the presence of water, and extracting a fraction of a coarse particulate protein-­containing product with a 0.05 N - 0.15 N alkaline aqueous solution at a temperature of 60 - 100°C for a period of time of 10 - 40 minutes.7. A process as set forth in claim 6, which additionally comprises adding an acid to said extracted fraction immediately after the extraction to adjust the pH thereof to 7 - 10 and to obtain a solid-containing mixture, separating the solids from said mixture, and adding an acid to the solid-free mixture to adjust the pH thereof to 2 - 5 to thereby precipitate a protein-rich product.8. A process as set forth in claim 7, which additionally com­prises extracting said fraction of the protein-containing product with a solvent, to thereby separate said fraction into a defatted protein and a vegetable oil.
说明书全文

This invention relates to a process for producing a protein-rich product, a fibrous product and/or a vegetable oil from brewer's spent grain (hereinafter referred to as BSG). The protein-rich product obtained by the present invention is suited as feed for farm animals and caltured fish, and is expected to find application as food material such as starting material for a seasoning.

As vegetable, protein-rich product, soybean and defatted soybean are most widely being used. However, soybean-producing districts are localized in the world, and a problem of short supply of soybean can arise on account of the unseasonable weather. In addition, soybean supply in Japan almost completely depends upon import, with the import price varying depenging upon various factors. Hence, protein-rich resources other than soybean, which can be supplied stably at a low price, have been desired to be developed.

On the other hand, since BSG, which is a by-product produced in producing beer, contains protein in an amount of as low as about 25 % based on dry weight, its use has been limited in past to cattle feed. Accordingly, it has been desired to separate a protein-rich product from BSG for finding new uses.

In order to increase a protein content, it has been attempted to mill and sieve dry BSG (U.S. Patents 4,377,601 and 4,547,382). In this process, husks become so fine in a grinding step that separation thereof from a protein-containing fraction becomes difficult, and the protein content of the resulting product is still as low as 30 to 40 wt % based on dry weight, thus the product still being insufficient as a protein resource. In addition, the process has another defect that, since raw BSG contains water, a large amount of heat energy is required for drying it. Hence, it is desired to develop a process which provides a protein-rich product containing proteins in an amount equal to or more than that of soybean (containing about 40 % of proteins) or defatted, protein-rich product containing proteins in an amount equal to or more than that of defatted soybean (containing about 50 % of proteins).

Japanese Unexamined Patent publication No. 51-129776 discloses a process of extracting BGR using an alkaline aqueous solution of 11 - 12 in pH at a temperature of 220 °F - 250°F (104 °C - 121°C), then precipitating a protein-rich product from the thus-obtained extract by isoelectric precipitation. This process, however, involves decomposition of proteins due to the severe, high-temperature extraction condition, resulting in a decreased yield of proteins and deteriorated quality of the product. In addition, this process requires a large heat energy for extraction at an elevated temperature. Further, in actual procedures, the alkaline aqueous solution must be added to the BSG to an increase in temperatue of the system, thus extracting procedures being complicated. Still further, the protein-rich product obtained by this process does not contain lipid contained in BSG, with the lipid important as feed for farm animals and fish being wasted.

As a result of intensive investigations to solve the above-described problems, the inventors have found that a protein-rich product can be inexpensively obtained by pressing BSG in a wet state so as to separate ground or crushed germs and other particles from husks and then sieving the pressed BSG in the presence of water. The present inventors have also found that a protein-containing coarse particulate product having a low protein content can be converted to a protein-rich product by subjecting it to an alkali extraction under a mild condition.

There is provided in accordance with the present invention a process for obtaining a protein-rich product and/or a fibrous product which comprises pressing BSG in a wet state to separate from husks ground germs and other particles, and sieving the pressed BSG in the presence of water to sieve out a protein-containing product.

In another aspect, the present invention provides a process for obtaining a protein-rich product which comprises pressing BSG in a wet state to separate from husks ground germs and other particles, sieving the pressed BSG in the presence of water, extracting a protein-containing coarse particulate fraction obtained by the above sieving treatment with a 0.05 N - 0.15 N aqueous alkaline solution at a temperature of 60 to 100°C for 10 to 40 minutes.

The present invention further provides a process for producing a vegetable oil and a defatted, protein-rich product, which comprises extracting the protein-rich product obtained by the above-mentioned process with a solvent.

These processes are described in detail below.

BSG is a saccharification residue of brewer's malt (optionally containing rice, corn grits, corn starch, etc. as secondary starting materials) to be produced as a by-product in production of beer. Usually, the BSG is separated from wort in a wet state by means of a solid-liquid separator such as a lauter tub or a mash filter has a water content of about 80 wt % and contains about 25 wt % of proteins on dry basis. In the present invention, BSG with a water content of about 70 - 80 wt % separated from the wort may be used as such, or may be dewatered or moistened before use. Or, dried BSG may be moistened to be adapted as the starting material.

The process of the present invention involves the step of pressing flat BSG in a wet state. The BSG is constituted by husks, germs and other particles, and contents of proteins thereof are about 5 wt %, about 50 wt % and about 50 wt %, respectively. The germs and other particles having a high protein content are bound or stuck to the husks as vegetable tissues. Therefore, a protein-rich product can be obtained by removing husks from the BSG.

The inventors' investigation has revealed that, when BSG is pressed in a wet state, germs and other particles having a high protein content are separated from husks and, at the same time, the separated germs and the particles are ground, with the husks remaining substantially non-ground and that the thus-obtained pressed BSG can be effectively separated into a protein-containing product and a fibrous (husk) product by sieving the pressed BSG in the presence of water.

As the pressing apparatus to be used in the present invention, any grinder with a structure suitable for giving a pressing force to a material to be treated may be used. The use of a roll mill is particularly preferred. In the pressing treatment using a roll mill, BSG in a wet state is pressed and partly ground by the pressing force between the rolls to thereby separate from the husks protein-rich germs and particles which have been bound or stuck thereto with the simultaneous grinding of the germs and particles. Gap between rolls be 0.05 to 2 mm, preferably 0.1 to 0.3 mm. In the treatment of pressing BSG, it suffices for BSG to have a water content not causing fine grinding of husks, with a water content equal to or greater than 65 wt % being particularly pre­ferable. If the water content is too low, part of the husks are ground to fine particles, which makes it difficult to sepa­rate the pressed BSG into husks and a protein- contaning product by sieving.

Additionally, in BSG before being processed exists, to some extent, a fine particulate, protein-containing product in a separate state from husks. It is, therefore, possible to preliminarily sieve such BSG prior to the pressing treatment to thereby separate and recover the fine particulate, protein-containing product. A sieve to be used in this preliminary sieving is of 20 to 50 meshes, preferably 30 to 35 meshes. This sieving treatment is conducted preferably in the presence of water.

In the present invention, the pressed BSG obtained as mentioned hereinbefore is then sieved in the presence of water to separate same into a fibrous fraction comprising husks and a fraction of protein-containing product. As techniques for sieving the pressed BSG in the presence of water, there may be mentioned, for example, a sieving technique wherein BSG is sieved using an apparatus whose sieving part is submerged, a sieving technique wherein previously watered BSG is fed to a sieving apparatus, and a sieving technique wherein BSG is sieved with a sieving apparatus while supplying or spraying water thereto. As the sieving apparatus, a vibrating filter is preferably used.

In the sieving treatment, a fraction of a fibrous product (size: 1 - 5 mm) composed of husks can be obtained as a plus sieve. For this purpose, sieve opening is of 5 - 20 meshes, preferably 10 - 15 meshes. On the other hand, a fraction passing through this sieve comprises a fraction of fine particles having a higher protein content and coarse particles having a lower protein content than the fine particles. In order to separate the former fraction of more protein-rich product (fraction of fine particles), sieving treatment is further conducted using a sieve of 20 - 50 meshes, preferably 30 - 35 meshes. In this sieving treatment, the coarse particles product is retained over the sieve, whereas the fine particles product is permitted to pass through the sieve.

The sieving treatment employed in the present invention is not particularly limited as to the number of times of sieving, order of sieving treatments, and other conditions, which may be variously varied and properly selected in consideration of clogging of sieve opening, etc. In the present invention, the aforesaid pressing treatment and this sieving treatment are preferably repeated several times (2 to 5 times) for the purpose of effectively separating and recovering the fraction of protein-rich product (fraction of fine particles). For example, a fraction of fibrous product is se­parated from the pressed BSG by first sieving, the remaining fraction is again sieved by second sieving to thereby separate it into a fraction of coarse particles and a fraction of fine particles, the fraction of coarse particles is again pressed, and the thus-obtained pressed coarse particles are sieved into a fraction of fine particles and a fraction of coarse particls to recover.

The combination of pressing treatment and sieving treatment described above enables one to obtain a fine particulate protein-rich product (fraction of fine particles) having a protein content of 40 wt % or more (based on dry weight), a protein-containing product (fraction of coarse particles) having a protein content of about 25 wt % ((based on dry weight), and a fibrous product composed of husks. The thus-­obtained fine particulate protein-rich product can be used as such or after drying or other treatment, as material for feed or food. In some uses, the product is advantageously defatted to be used as defatted protein-rich product. On the other hand, the coarse particulate protein-containing product can be utilized as feed for cattle similarly with conventional BSG, or may preferably be subjected to an alkali-extracting treatment to be described hereinafter to separate and recover a protein-rich product therefrom. The fibrous product composed of husks can be effectively utilized as feed or fuel, and the combustion ash thereof can be utilized as fertilizer or ceramic material.

The alkali extraction of the coarse particulate protein-­containing product (fraction of coarse particles) obtained as described above is conducted by adding a 0.05 N - 0.15 N alkaline aqueous solution to the coarse particulate protein-containing product and conducting extraction under the conditions of 60 - 100 °C, preferably 70 - 90 °C, in temperature and 10 - 40 minutes, preferably 15 - 35minutes, in extracting period. As the alkali for preparing the alkaline aqueous solution, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, etc. are usually used.

After the aforesaid extraction using the alkaline aqueous solution, a protein-rich product is precipitated by a proper method to recover it. For example, an acid is added to the extract immediately after the extraction treatment to adjust pH to 7 - 11, an extraction residue is removed from the extract, and an acid is further added to the thus-obtained extract to adjust the pH to 2 to 5, preferably to an isoelectric point of 3 to 4 to thereby precipitate a protein-rich product, and this precipitate is separated and recovered by a solid-liquid separation method. As the solid-liquid separation method, conventional ones such as centrifugal separation, filtration separation, etc. may be employed. The thus-obtained product has a protein content of about 50 wt % or above and a lipid content of about 15 wt % or above.

In the extraction treatment in accordance with the present invention, a comparatively low extracting temperature of 60 to 100 °C and a short extracting time of 10 to 40 minutes are employed. Employment of such conditions serves to avoid decomposition of the extracted protein-rich product. After completion of the alkali extraction treatment, an acid may immediately be added, if necessary, to the extract to reduce its pH to 7 - 11 to thereby inhibit decomposition of protein with alkali. A protein-rich product may be obtained by supressing decomposition of proteins as described above. This protein-rich product may be utilized as feed or the like in an as-produced form or after treatment such as defatting treatment or drying.

All of the thus-obtained protein-rich products contain lipid but, in some uses, they are advantageously used as defatted products. For such uses, the protein-rich product is extracted with a solvent in a wet state or in a state of being dried at low temperatures (30 - 100°C) to recover lipid (vegetable oil), followed by revoming the solvent. As solvents to be used in this case, there may be used paraffins such as n-hexane, alcohols such as ethanol, supercritical carbon dioxide gas, etc. The solvent-removing treatment may be conducted by heating the extract residue to a temperature equal to or above the boiling point of the solvent under ambient or reduced pressure, or by pressure-reducing procedure. Further, removal of the solvent from the extract enables lipid (vegetable oil) to be recovered.

This invention provides a protein-rich product, fibrous product and vegetable oil with an enhanced value effectively and inexpensively from BSG. The protein-rich product can be advantageously utilized as feed for farm animals or cultured fish or as material for food such as seasoning material as is the same with conventional soybean protein.

The present invention is now described in more detail by reference to Examples.

Example 1

About 10 kg of water was added to 3 kg (dry weight: 672 g) of BSG in a wet state (water content: 77.6 wt %), and the resulting mixture was subjected to preliminary sieving in water using a 35-mesh sieve. A fraction of fine particulate protein-contaning product passed through the sieve was dewatered by centrifugation to recover in a slurry state. On the otherhand, a fraction of coarse particulate protein-containing product remaining over the sieve was pressed flat by means of a roll mill (roll-rotating rate: 100 rpm; roll-to-roll gap: 0.1 mm) to thereby separate particles bound or stuck to husks from the husks and concurrently grind the particles. Then, this roll mill-treated product was sieved using a 35-mesh sieve to recover a fraction of fine particulate protein-contaning product. Then, a fraction of coarse particulate protein-containing product remaining over the sieve was again subjected to roll mill treatment and sieving treatment in the same manner to recover a fraction of fine particulate protein-contaning product. Further, a fraction of coarse particulate protein-containing product remaining over the sieve was sieved in water using a 10-mesh sieve to recover 160 g by dry weight of a fibrous product as a fraction composed of only husks remaining over the sieve.

The fine particulate protein-contaning product recovered as a slurry in the above-described manner was vacuum dried to obtain 180 g of a dry product. This fine particulate protein-containing product was a protein-rich product having a protein content of 50.8 wt % based on dry weight.

Example 2

500 ml of ethanol was added to 100 g of the protein-rich product obtained in Example 1, followed by extraction treatment at 30°C for 1 hour. This extraction treatment yielded 83.0 g of defatted protein-rich product (dry product) and 17.0 g of a vegetable oil, with the protein content in the defatted protein-rich product being 62.0 % based on dry weight.

Example 3

About 30 liters of water was added to 10 kg (dry weight: 2.24 kg) of BSG in a wet state (water content: 77.6 wt %), and the resulting mixture was subjected to preliminary sieving in water using a 35-mesh sieve. A fraction of fine particulate protein-contaning product passed through the sieve was dewatered by centrifugation to recover in a slurry state. On the otherhand, a fraction of coarse particulate protein-containing product remaining over the sieve was pressed by means of a roll mill (roll-rotating rate: 100 rpm; roll-to-roll gap: 0.3 mm) to thereby separate particles bound or stuck to husks from the husks and concurrently grind the particles. Then, this roll mill-treated product was sieved using a 10-mesh sieve to recover a fraction of fibrous product composed of only husks remaining over the sieve, and a fraction of fine particulate and coarse particulate protein-containing product passed through the sieve. Then, this sieve-passed fraction was sieved in water using a 35-mesh sieve to recover a coarse particulate protein-containing product as a plus sieve and a fine particulate protein-contaning product as a minus sieve.

The dry weight of the thus recovered fraction of fine particulate protein-containing product was 522 g, with its protein content being 51.49 g based on dry weight and the protein-recovery ratio being 47.2 %.

On the other hand, the weight (dry weight) of the fraction of the coarse particulate protein-containing product obtained above was 943 g, with its protein content being 25.9 wt %.

Then, 500 ml of water was added to 100 g (in a wet state) of the fraction of coarse particulate protein-containing product, followed by further adding a 2N NaOH aqueous solution to prepare a 0.1 N alkaline aqueous solution as a whole. After stirring the solution at 85 °C for 30 minutes, an extraction residue was removed by centrifugation, and the resulting extract was adjusted to 4.5 in pH with 2N hydrochloric acid. This pH adjustment gave a precipitate, and this precipitate was recovered by centrifugation. The dry weight of this precipitate was 19.0 g, with its protein content being 58.6 wt % and the protein-recovery ratio from the fraction of coarse particulate protein-containing product being 42.9 wt %.

As is described above, 72.2 % of proteins can be recovered from BSG by combining the pressing treatment and the alkali extraction treatment.

Example 4

Relation between alkali concentration, extracting period and protein-recovery ratio in the case of conducting extraction by adding 1 liter of a NaOH aqueous solution to 100 g (water content: 75 wt %) of the coarse particulate protein-containing product obtained in Example 3 is tabulated in Table 1.

Table 1

Alkali concentration(N)

Protein-recovery Ratio (wt %)

Extracting Period (min.)

15

30

45

60

120

0.04

42.1

41.9

38.4

41.3

39.1

0.10

44.0

50.5

33.7

31.3

28.1

0.20

34.6

26.8

24.9

17.8

15.6

0.40

7.64

6.13

5.19

5.23

2.18

Example 5

Relation between temperature, alkali concentration, extracting period and protein-recovery ratio and protein content in the case of conducting extraction for 30 minutees by adding 1 liter of a 0.1 N NaOH aqueous solution to 100 g (water content: 75 wt %) of the coarse particulate protein-containing product obtained in Example 3 is tabulated in Table 2.

Table 2

Extracting Temp.( °C)

50

70

90

100

120

Protein-recovering Ratio (%)

27.2

44.1

48.4

55.3

35.0

Protein Content (%)

60.2

59.8

58.6

46.6

46.1

The invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The present embodiments are therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description, and all the changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore inetnded to be embraced therein.

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