Utilization of commercial pea protein (PP) in food emulsions largely depends on empirical experience due to insufficient knowledge. Emulsions made of seven commercial PP ingredients by high-pressure homogenization (HPH) were studied and uncovered their relationship with physicochemical and interfacial properties of homogenized PP. Results showed that HPH produced PP supernatants of varying size and composition, leading to differences in interfacial adsorption of emulsions. Four emulsions had very small droplets (1.1-2.7 μm), in contrast to one with medium sized droplets (5.8 μm) and two with large droplets (> 10 μm). The oil droplet size was highly correlated with the protein content and size in the soluble phase, suggesting that emulsification was mainly driven by soluble proteins after homogenization. Moreover, small droplet size was not a prerequisite to flocculation and coalescence stability. During storage, emulsions showed different mechanisms of destabilization. Overall, these results provided an accurate assessment of commercial PPs as emulsifiers, aiding the development of predictive models.
Keywords: Commercial pea protein; Emulsification; Emulsion stability; High-pressure homogenization (HPH); Interfacial behavior; Solubility.
© 2026 The Authors.