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Enzymes for Research, Diagnostic and Industrial Use

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Food and Beverage Applications

Enzymes are essential in food processing, playing a key role in making products like cheese, vinegar, wine, bread, beer, and more. By facilitating these processes, enzymes help conserve energy and resources while significantly improving overall efficiency. In addition, enzymes have been shown to reduce both the volume and toxicity of by-products and wastewater, contributing to more sustainable production practices.

Creative Enzymes provides a wide variety of high-purity enzymes and custom blends tailored for food and beverage production. Our solutions are designed to deliver consistent performance and flexibility. They're perfect for improving different production processes. At the same time, they help support eco-friendly and efficient operations.

Variety of food: Fruits and vegetables, grains and nuts, and fish.

Fruit and Vegetable Processing Enzymes

  • Improve quality
  • Increase yield and production efficiency
  • Simplify storage and transportation

Enzymes offer multiple benefits for fruit processing.

Enzymes play a crucial role in the growth, ripening, and storage of fruits and vegetables. While most enzymes in plant tissues help maintain metabolism, some can negatively affect quality attributes like color, texture, taste, odor, and nutritional value after harvest. For example, lipoxygenase can influence flavor and odor development in certain vegetables. Phenol oxidases contribute to discoloration, which detracts from both taste and nutritional quality. The activity of pectinases causes fruits to soften, while α-amylases break down starch into shorter fragments called dextrins, which can compromise texture. Additionally, ascorbic acid oxidase reduces vitamin availability, impairing the nutritional value of fruits and vegetables.

To optimize fruit juice production, enzymes like pectinases are used to enhance yield, clarity, and stability. Pectinases break down pectin, a structural polysaccharide in fruit cell walls, aiding juice extraction and reducing viscosity. This enzymatic action results in higher juice yield and clearer, more appealing products. Moreover, enzymatic processing improves product quality, boosts efficiency, and helps minimize waste.

When processing fruits and vegetables, it's essential to maintain key quality parameters, such as nutrient availability, bioactive compound effectiveness, taste, color, texture, and turbidity. Controlling or inactivating quality-reducing enzymes is critical in preserving the desired characteristics of the final product.

The most commonly used enzymes in fruit and vegetable processing include pectinases, cellulases, tannases, xylanases, and esterase. These enzymes help ensure the optimal quality and efficiency of processing, contributing to both higher yields and better-quality products.

Categories Cat. No. Product Name
Pectinases
Pectinases are the most commonly used enzyme in the fruit juice industry because they increase juice yields and accelerate juice clarification.
DIS-1030 Pectinase Get a quote
FJE-1411 Pectinase for Fruit Juice Get a quote
FJE-1432 Pectinase blend to for vegetable juice Get a quote
FJE-1412, FJE-1423, FJE-1425, FJE-1429, FJE-1430... Get a quote
Cellulases DIS-1017 Cellulase Get a quote
DIS-1018 Cellulase-AN Get a quote
Tannases TAC-3000 Tannase (Food grade) Get a quote
Xylanases DIS-1032 Xylanase Get a quote
ASE-3102 Xylanase for Mash Viscosity Reduction and Xylan hydrolysis Get a quote
Esterase FJE-1428 Pectin Methylesterase Get a quote

Baking Enzymes

  • Change dough properties
  • Extend shelf-life

Bread showcasing the benefits of enzyme applications in baking, such as improved texture and shelf life.

Enzyme additives are widely used in bakery to produce products of consistently high quality by enabling better dough handling, preventing solidification and allowing control over crumb structure and color, flavor, moisture and volume. Enzymes that make some contribution to baked goods may come from enzymes naturally present in the flour, enzymes associated with the metabolic activity of the predominant microorganism, or enzymes intentionally added during the mixing process as technological or processing aids.

Supplementing flour and dough with enzyme improvers is a common practice for flour standardization and as a baking aid. Over the years, enzymes have gained importance in the bakery industry as they modify dough rheology, gas retention and crumb softness in bread making, modify dough rheology in pastry and cookie making, modify product softness in cake making and reduce acrylamide formation in baked goods.

The most commonly used enzymes in baking belong to two main classes: hydrolases (such as amylases, proteases, hemicellulases, and lipases) and oxidoreductases (including glucose oxidase and lipoxygenase). These enzymes work together to enhance the texture, consistency, and overall quality of baked products.

Categories Cat. No. Product Name
Xylanases DIS-1032 Xylanase Get a quote
BAK-1724 Xylanase based enzyme blend for baking Get a quote
ASE-3102 Xylanase for Mash Viscosity Reduction and Xylan hydrolysis Get a quote
Amylases BAK-1715 α-amylase for baking Get a quote
BAK-1711 Fungal amylase for baking Get a quote
BAK-1712 Maltogenic amylase for baking Get a quote
Glucose Oxidase BAK-001 Glucose Oxidase (Food Grade) Get a quote
Lipases DIS-1026 Lipase Get a quote
Proteases BAK-1722 Protease for special flours Get a quote
BAK-1723 Protease for baking Get a quote
Cellulases BAK-1728 Cellulase for baking Get a quote
FLO-1302 Fungal hemicellulase enzyme for flour Get a quote
Glucoamylase BAK-1726 Glucoamylase for baking Get a quote

Brewing Enzymes

  • Degrade starches and proteins
  • Reduce viscosity
  • Improve clarity and stability
  • Improve efficiency and consistent quality

Beer illustrating how enzymes are used in the brewing industry for enhanced flavor and efficiency.

The technology of beer production dates back six thousand years and has been practiced by the world's oldest civilizations. Nowadays, brewing is one of the leading food industries in the world in general and in the West in particular. Enzyme utilization is one of the main pillars of the brewing industry, and whether the enzyme is endogenous in the grain itself or added from external sources, a deep understanding and research of these enzymes is mandatory for the sake of better production and higher quality.

Enzymes used in the brewing industry are diverse in their action and properties. The main enzymes used in the brewing industry can be divided into four main processes which are germination, mashing, fermentation and clarification. The four most commonly used enzymes in brewing are β-glucanase, protease, α-amylase and β-amylase. In addition to endogenous enzymes, the beer industry often adds exogenous commercial enzymes to improve quality, such as clarification, color, texture, or flavor. For example, when barley is mashed and does not produce enough enzymes to break down and hydrolyze starch, this can result in poor beer quality and low yield; This is where you need to use exogenous enzymes.

During malting, β-glucan, fibers and proteins are broken down by the action of proteases, glucanases and xylanases. After the starch is gelatinized by the hot water, the amylase enzymes begin to act on the wort, which produces sugars through the liquefaction and scarification processes. Later in the fermentation process, α-amylase and β-glucanase can be reused to improve fermentation yield and filtration. Typically, other enzymes can be used for added quality, such as α-acetolactate decarboxylase (ALDC), which improves fermentation by reducing fermentation time, and other commercial types of proteases, which keep the beer clear during cooling and chilling of the beer.

Categories Cat. No. Product Name
α-Amylases ALC-1517 High-temperature α-amylase for Alcohol Industry Get a quote
BER-1513 Mid-temperature Refining α -amylase for beer Get a quote
Glucoamylase ALC-1516 Glucoamylase for Alcohol Industry Get a quote
BRE-1619 Glucoamylase for light beer Get a quote
Peptidase DIS-1031 Peptidase Get a quote
β-Glucanases DIS-1014 β-Glucanase Get a quote
Proteases BER-001 Neutral Protease for Beer Brewing (Food Grade) Get a quote
BER-1512 Acid Protease for beer Get a quote
Xylanase DIS-1032 Xylanase Get a quote
Decarboxylase BRE-1621 α-acetolactate decarboxylase Get a quote
Custom blends BER-1514 Beer blend enzyme Get a quote

Starch & Sweeteners Enzymes

  • Better tastes of healthy choices

Amylase converts cornstarch to glucose, which is used to make sugar.

Starch is a polysaccharide found in the organs of plants. In fact, it is the second most abundant compound synthesized by plants (cellulose being the first) and is found in granular form. These granules are stored as a reserve food supply to be used during dormancy, growth, or germination.

The use of enzymes to convert starch into more usable, lower molecular weight saccharides is an old technology that has been used by humans for centuries. Processes such as malting barley were developed through empirical approaches long before the concept of an enzyme was elaborated. Today, these older uses of enzymes have been rationalized in the light of our knowledge of enzyme action, and new processes using highly purified enzymes from a variety of sources can be proposed and adopted on a commercial scale.

At present, the main application of starch-modifying enzymes in the food industry is the production of low molecular weight sugars by complete hydrolysis of starch.

Categories Cat. No. Product Name
Pullulanases BRE-1618 Pullulanase for Saccharification Get a quote
SUG-003 Pullulanase (Food Grade) Get a quote
Glucoamylases ASE-3104 Glucoamylase for Saccharification in Starch Industry Get a quote
BAK-1714 Glucoamylase enzyme for crust Get a quote
α-Amylases ASE-3101 Thermostable α-amylase for Liquefaction in Starch Industry Get a quote
BRE-1611 α-Amylase enzyme for liquefaction Get a quote
Carbohydrases GRAIN-2517 Carbohydrase blend for cereal grain Get a quote
Custom blends ASE-002 Corn Starch Processing Complex Enzyme (Food Grade) Get a quote
ASE-3105 Enzyme blend for ereal grain starch processing Get a quote

Enzymes in Dairy Industry

  • Dairy production
  • Enhance product quality
  • Improving processing efficiency

Enzymes enhancing product quality and processing efficiency in dairy production.

Enzymes play a critical role in dairy production, enhancing product quality, improving processing efficiency and expanding the range of dairy products available to consumers. The most important enzymes in dairy production are rennet (chymosin), lactase, lipases and proteases.

  • Rennet (Chymosin) in Cheese Production: Rennet, mainly composed of the enzyme chymosin, is key to turning milk into curds and whey—the starting point for making cheese. Chymosin works by cutting kappa-casein in milk, which makes the proteins clump together into a gel-like curd. After that, the curds are cut and heated to remove the liquid whey and solidify the curds. Depending on the type of cheese being made, the curds may be salted, pressed, and aged to develop flavor and texture.
  • Lactase in Lactose-Free Products: Lactase is a digestive enzyme that hydrolyzes lactose, a sugar found in milk, into its constituent monosaccharides, glucose and galactose. This process makes dairy products digestible for people with lactose intolerance. Lactase can be added at various stages, such as during the production of fluid milk, yogurt or ice cream. The resulting lactose-free products are not only suitable for lactose intolerant consumers, but also have a slightly sweeter taste due to the presence of glucose and galactose.
  • Lipases in Flavor Development: Lipases catalyze the hydrolysis of milk fats into free fatty acids and glycerol, which are essential for the development of flavor in certain cheeses. Lipases are added to milk or cream used in the production of cheeses such as blue cheese, Parmesan and Romano.
  • Proteases in Milk Protein Hydrolysis: Proteases hydrolyze milk proteins into peptides and amino acids that can improve the nutritional and functional properties of dairy products. This hydrolysis process can improve the digestibility of dairy products, making them suitable for consumption by people with special dietary requirements, infants and those requiring protein supplements.
Categories Cat. No. Product Name
Chymosin DAI-1219 Rennet with enzyme complex Get a quote
DAI-1218 Rennet for cheese making
CEFX-051 Rennet from Kluyveromyces Lactis
Lactases DIS-1021 Fungal Lactase
DAI-1212 Concentrated food-grade lactase powder for Dairy Processing
DAI-1211 Food-grade liquid lactase for Dairy Processing
Lipases DIS-1026 Lipase
DIS-1027 Lipase (Yeast)
DAI-1213 Triacylglycerol lipase for Dairy processing
OIL-1103 Triacylglycerol lipase enzyme for fat and dairy
Proteases NATZ-071 Neutral Protease (food grade) Powder
DIS-1022 Fungal Protease
DIS-1019 Fungal Acid Protease
DIS-1011 Acid Stable Protease

Meat Processing Enzymes

  • Enhance texture and flavor
  • Improve product quality

Enzymes are used in the meat industry.

Enzymes are used in the meat industry to tenderize meat, enhance flavor and improve product quality. Proteases such as papain, bromelain and ficin are commonly used to break down muscle proteins, making meat more tender and palatable. This enzymatic tenderization is particularly beneficial for tougher cuts of meat, making them suitable for various culinary applications. In addition, enzymes are used in the production of processed meats, such as sausages, where they aid in the hydrolysis of proteins, improving texture and flavor. The use of enzymes in meat processing not only improves the sensory attributes of meat products, but also increases the overall efficiency of meat production.

Categories Cat. No. Product Name
Proteases PRO-1823 Neutral/alkaline protease for meat proteins Get a quote
NATZ-071 Neutral Protease (food grade) Powder
DIS-1022 Fungal Protease
DIS-1029 Papain
DIS-1016 Bromelain

At Creative Enzymes, from improving flavors to enhancing textures and boosting yields, our enzyme innovations are here to elevate your products. Contact us to find the optimal solution for shaping a smarter, greener future for food and beverage.

Catalog Product Name EC No. CAS No. Source Price
NATZ-106 Esterase Inquiry
NATC-210 Biscuit Improver Inquiry
NATZ-103 Algal Lyase Inquiry
NATC-207 Pectate lyase (food grade) Aspergillus nig... Inquiry
NATZ-071 Neutral Protease (food grade) Powder 9001-92-7 Bacillus subtil... Inquiry
CEFX-042 Enzyme Blend for Pet Inquiry
NATZ-085 Kiwi protease Inquiry
FJE-1027 Rapidase extra press white grapes Inquiry
FJE-1026 Rapidase extra fruit aroma Inquiry
FJE-1025 Rapidase extra color release Inquiry
FJE-1024 Rapidase clear extreme condition Inquiry
FJE-1023 Rapidase clear granular from Aspergillus niger Aspergillus nig... Inquiry
EXTZ-166 Lecitase Inquiry
NATZ-001 Native Aspergillus oryzae β-Galactosidase (food grade) Inquiry
NATZ-009 Alginate lyase (food grade) Inquiry
NATZ-003 Anthocyanase  (Food grade) Inquiry
PRO-1833 Enzyme blend for hydrolyzing plant source proteins Inquiry
TAC-3000 Tannase (Food grade) 9025-71-2 Aspergillus ory... Inquiry
FJE-1021 Rapidase Revelation Aroma (AR2000) from Aspergillus niger Aspergillus nig... Inquiry
BER-001 Neutral Protease for Beer Brewing (Food Grade) 9001-92-7 Bacillus subtil... Inquiry
SUG-004 Fungal α Amylase (Food Grade) 9000-90-2 Aspergillus ory... Inquiry
SUG-003 Pullulanase (Food Grade) 9075-68-7 Bacillus lichen... Inquiry
ASE-002 Corn Starch Processing Complex Enzyme (Food Grade) Inquiry
ASE-001 Weat Gluten Processing Complex Enzyme (Food Grade) Inquiry
DIS-1033 Fungal Pepsin 1:10,000 9001-75-6 Inquiry
DIS-1032 Xylanase 37278-89-0 Trichoderma lon... Inquiry
DIS-1031 Peptidase 9031-96-3 Aspergillus mel... Inquiry
DIS-1030 Pectinase 9032-75-1 Aspergillus nig... Inquiry
DIS-1029 Papain 9001-73-4 Carica Papaya Inquiry
DIS-1027 Lipase (Yeast) 9001-62-1 Candida cylindr... Inquiry