Pulverulent corn-steep

Drug – bio-affecting and body treating compositions – Preparations characterized by special physical form – Tablets – lozenges – or pills

Reexamination Certificate

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C424S400000, C424S439000, C424S489000, C514S960000, C435S041000, C435S042000

Reexamination Certificate

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06368623

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a pulverulent corn-steep without a drying substrate.
It also relates to a particular method of preparing said pulverulent corn-steep and to its uses in industry.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Corn-steep, a term frequently used by the person skilled in the art, refers to the concentrated steep waters which result from the steeping of maize.
The steeping of maize in water is the first step in the extraction of starch in wet starch works. This steeping allows the swelling of the maize grains and the elimination of highly fermentable soluble matter contained in these grains. It consists in keeping the maize in silos for a given period of time within hot water containing a small quantity of sulphurous anhydride, this in order to facilitate the later separation of protein, cellulose and starch and, moreover, to stop the growth of undesirable micro-organisms.
Two essential phenomena take place simultaneously during steeping: the first consists in a diffusion of soluble matter from the maize grain towards the steep water whilst the second consists in a fermentation of this soluble matter in the steep water by lactic bacteria, the steeping conditions (presence of sulphites, reducing sugars, temperature) being favorable for the speedy development of this bacterial flora.
The main interest of these concentrated steep waters, usually called corn-steep by the skilled person, is their composition in essential nutrients, resulting from the transfer of the soluble matter of the grain. These nutrients constitute factors which favor the growth of micro-organisms as well as the production of secondary metabolites and make the corn-steep an ideal source of nutrient substances in the fermentation industries.
Indeed, corn-steep constitutes a source of choice of organic nitrogen through the distribution and the forms of its amino acids: free, peptide, protein, as well as a source of carbon (lactic acid) and phosphate (phytic acid) with a delayed effect. A significant content of vitamin and trace elements completes the interest of corn-steep as a nutrient source for the growth of micro-organisms and the induction of secondary metabolites when the corn-steep is associated with one or several sources of carbon (glucose, maltodextrin, starch, sucrose . . . ).
Moreover, it constitutes a nutrient source which is relatively cheap by comparison with yeast extracts which represent the reference material in this field and which are also used in human and animal feeding.
Furthermore, it is known that the use of corn-steep to replace complex nitrogen sources such as cotton or soya proteins, makes it possible to increase substantially antibiotic production yields.
However, corn-steep in liquid form presents problems of settling in the course of time, which is especially bothersome for transporting, storing and pumping the product. It must be stored in stirred and thermostatically controlled tanks to limit the development of its composition. This is all the more true when corn-steep is consumed in small quantities at a time by certain fermentation industries. In this case, it is particularly important to control its preservation. Obtaining corn-steep in dry form has then been considered.
Corn-steep has a water content of 45 to 55%. Evaporation to eliminate more than half of the water which it contains cannot be considered in view of the cost of evaporation on the one hand and the sensitivity to heat of certain nutrients on the other hand.
Drying through atomisation of liquid corn-steep has then been studied.
This technique, very widespread in the industry, has allowed the drying of products well known as difficult to dry, such as products which are sensitive to heat or highly hygroscopic. However, in the case of corn-steep, the person skilled in the art has met with gluing problems. Indeed, if the drying of certain products does not present any problems, i.e. the powder comes steadily out of the drying chamber or tower and has satisfactory appearance and flow properties, the liquid corn-steep, on the other hand, being rich in amino acids and hygroscopic substances, is subject to gluing.
This gluing manifests itself in deposits at various levels of the drying chamber and its ancillary equipment, deposits which generate losses and a deterioration of the product which can require stopping production with cleaning cycles which are costly in time, material and labour. Gluing can also happen downstream of drying when the powder, after a more or less lengthy storing period, loses its fluidity and forms lumps.
It is therefore very difficult to atomise corn-steep because of the particularly hygroscopic nature of the organic acids and the salts which it contains and especially the potassium lactate which is present in a large proportion (Corn Chemistry and Technology—K. N. WRIGHT 466-467).
To overcome these gluing problems, methods, sometimes empirical ones, have been applied at the industrial level, such as the addition to the product to be atomised of drying substrates, anti-agglomerating agents or dessicating powders.
In the food-processing industries, substrates frequently used are maltodextrins and glucose syrups. However, their incorporation rates are limited by the diluting effect which they exert on the product and by their high cost. Furthermore, such products cannot be subjected to a later heat treatment, such as sterilisation, as their high content of free sugars makes them subject to caramelization. Moreover, these compositions are highly hygroscopic which leads to lumping phenomena during storage.
It was then proposed in patent U.S. Pat. No. 2,859,114 that maize fibres be mixed with corn-steep so that it is absorbed by these fibres, thus making a drying operation possible. However, this method has the disadvantage of bringing to the corn-steep a high content of insoluble matter which is not desirable in the applications envisaged, especially fermentation.
Indeed, such a product very quickly shows settling phenomena during storage and through this a heterogeneous distribution of nutrient substances.
Furthermore, the product shows at the end an insufficient corn-steep concentration.
Other solutions, like the one described in the patent U.S. Pat. No. 3,655,396 consist in completely eliminating the lactic acid from the corn-steep. The lactic acid having indeed been blamed for the problems of drying corn-steep without it being clearly explained, it is eliminated with yeasts able to metabolise it, the culture medium obtained being afterwards dried on drums or through atomisation.
However, such a method has the drawback of depriving corn-steep of an important source of carbon on the one hand, but also of a precursor which is particularly interesting in the culture of diauxic micro-organisms.
There was therefore the need for a dry form of corn-steep with retained nutrient value and solubility.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Strengthened by this assessment, the inventors have therefore sought to perfect a pulverulent corn-steep, the qualities of which are retained and without the defects previously described for corn-steeps in powder form according to prior art.
And it is to the credit of the inventors that they have succeeded against all expectations, after carrying out in-depth research on the subject, in preparing a pulverulent corn-steep without being faced with gluing problems, this pulverulent corn-steep being without the defects noticed for the corn-steeps in powder form according to prior art, whilst retaining its initial qualities. The inventors have highlighted, in a surprising and unexpected manner, that such pulverulent corn-steep can be prepared without a drying substrate and without previous separation treatment, in special conditions starting from liquid corn-steep, with an atomisation process which had never made it possible in the past to obtain directly and without gluing corn-steep in powder form with the nutrient qualities intact, improved even, with satisfactory solubility and without any tendency to become lumpy.
It is all the more surprising that t

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