02146naa a2200397 a 450000100080000000500110000800800410001902200140006002400520007410000200012624501230014626000090026952010260027865000160130465000100132065000230133065000150135365000130136865000130138165000110139465000150140565000190142065000120143965000180145165000160146965000230148565000090150865300240151765300320154165300250157370000220159870000190162070000170163970000200165677300720167621309972021-03-31 2021 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d a2525-34097 ahttp://dx.doi.org/10.33448/rsd-v10i2.125032DOI1 aBENTO, J. A. C. aVegan tempeh burgerbprepared with aged bean grains fermented by Rhizopus oligosporus inoculum.h[electronic resource] c2021 aThis work has the objective of producing inoculum to enable tempeh production from aged common bean, by checking fermentation development according to the soybean/common bean ratio and defining the procedure for tempeh preparing in compliance with regulation on standards for acceptable microbiological contamination. Tempehs of common bean (BT), soybean (ST) and both (SBT) were produced by two methods (traditional and modified). The viable BT was used for hamburger preparation, which was evaluated for sensory acceptance in comparison to the traditional ST. The best inoculum Rhizopus oligosporus obtained was made with a medium with rice flour and presented a cell concentration of 106cells/mL. Tempehs made in a traditional method presented a bacterium grown beyond limit allowed by regulation. Instead, the modified method can be recommended to the industries to ensure the sanitary quality of tempeh. Finally, BT hamburger had a good acceptance (58%) regarding general appearance, but its flavor must be improved. aAutoclaving aBeans aFood contamination aHamburgers aInoculum aSoybeans aTempeh aVegan diet aContaminação aFeijão aFermentação aGlycine Max aPhaseolus Vulgaris aSoja aFeijão envelhecido aHamburguer vegano de tempeh aRhizopus oligosporus1 aBASSINELLO, P. Z.1 aCOLOMBO, A. O.1 aVITAL, R. J.1 aCARVALHO, R. N. tResearch, Society and Developmentgv. 10, n. 2, e38110212503, 2021.