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1.
Lupin is an economical source of protein, fibre and bioactive compounds, and to obtain these health and nutritional benefits lupin flour has been used in bread production. However, addition of more than 10% lupin flour markedly reduces bread quality mainly due to gluten dilution. The main aim of this research was to retain lupin bread quality enriched with higher percentages of lupin flour (20%) by addition of vital gluten powder (0%, 2%, 3.5% and 5%), investigating the effects of lupin variety (Lupinus albus and L. angustifolius) and two baking systems (rapid and sponge & dough). Impact on bread staling qualities was also determined through texture analysis of samples over a 72-h storage period. Compared to lupin bread with nil gluten addition, significant improvements in loaf volume and crumb texture were observed with addition of gluten powder especially at 5% which increased loaf volume by an average of 20% across lupin sources and baking methods, and crumb softness by 30–50%. Differences were observed between the lupin flour sources. L. angustifolius had a reduced weakening effect when blended with the base flour compared with L. albus. The Sponge & Dough process was found to be more suitable to the inclusion of lupin flour than the rapid process.  相似文献   

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Soybean (full‐fat and defatted) and barley flours were incorporated into wheat flour at 5, 10, 15 and 20% substitution levels. The gluten content, sedimentation value and water absorption capacity of the flour blends and the mixing time of the dough decreased with increase in the level of soybean and barley flour separately and in combinations. Protein and glutelin contents increased significantly on blending of soyflour (full‐fat and defatted) to bread wheat flour. The breads prepared from the blends also varied in their loaf weight, loaf volume and sensory characteristics. The bread volume decreased with increasing amount of non‐wheat flour substitution. The crumb colour changed from creamish white to dull brown and a gradual hardening of crumb texture was observed as the addition of soybean (full‐fat and defatted) and barley flours increased. At the higher levels, the acceptability declined because of the compact texture of the crumb and the strong flavour of the product. The addition of 10% of soyflour (full‐fat and defatted) or 15% of barley flour, full‐fat soy + barley or defatted soy + barley flour to bread flour produced acceptable bread.  相似文献   

4.
Gluten free bread from rice flour substituted with carob flour and resistant starch (RS) was investigated. RS and protein amount added were optimized in model gluten free breads (MGFB's) containing rice flour using Response Surface Methodology (RSM). RS addition did not influence MGFB's crumb firmness, but it acted as an elastifying agent. A MGFB with soft and elastic crumb was produced with 10 g protein/100 g flour and 15 g RS/100 g flour. MGFB recipe was further improved by adding carob flour. Its addition raises the water content needed for the breadmaking procedure, but did not significantly affect any of the textural and structural parameters measured. Water amount increase diminished crumb firmness and contributed to the development of an open crumb cell structure. The design allowed the determination of the optimum formulation for obtaining gluten-free bread with low crumb firmness and improved porosity values by combining 15 g carob flour/100 g flour, 15 g RS/ 100 g flour, 10 g protein/ 100 g flour and 140 g water/ 100 g flour. The use of carob flour and RS constitutes a promising approach in producing fibre-rich formulations of high quality characteristics in order to fulfil population deficiency of dietary fibre intake.  相似文献   

5.
Green plantain flour (GPF) was used as a functional ingredient to produce gluten‐free (GF) bread based on a flour blend of rice flour and GF wheat starch (50:50) to improve their functional properties and to increase their resistant starch (RS) content. In pretrials, an addition of up to 30% GPF provided acceptable bread quality with maximum RS content. Based on these trials, two 23 factorial screening experimental designs were applied, where water content, baking temperature and baking time of GF bread containing 30% GPF addition were optimised. The best baking conditions to achieve satisfying GF bread quality – higher loaf volume, softer crumb firmness and regular porosity structure at the highest RS content could be defined to a maximum addition of water at 160%, baking temperature of 180 °C and baking time of 90 min. The incorporation of GPF showed good potential to improve the quality of GF bread.  相似文献   

6.
The impact of addition of gelatinized rice porridge to bread has been investigated on loaf volume, viscoelastic properties and air-bubble structure. We prepared four variety of bread: bread containing rice porridge (rice porridge bread), bread containing gelatinized rice flour (gelatinized rice flour bread), and wheat flour and rice flour breads for references. Instrumental analyses the bread samples were carried out by volume measurement of loaf samples, creep test and digital image analysis of crumb samples. Rice porridge bread showed the maximum specific volume of 4.51 cm3/g, and even gelatinized rice flour bread showed 4.30 cm3/g, which was larger than the reference bread samples (wheat and rice flour breads). The values of viscoelastic moduli of gelatinized rice flour bread and rice porridge bread were significantly smaller (p < 0.05) than those of wheat flour and rice flour breads, which indicates addition of gelatinized rice flour or rice porridge to bread dough encouraged breads softer. Bubble parameters such as mean air- bubble area, number of air-bubble, air-bubble area ratio (ratio of bubble area to whole area) were not significantly different among the bread crumb samples. Therefore, the bubble structures of the bread samples seemed to similar, which implied that difference of viscoelasticity was attributed to air-bubble wall (solid phase of bread crumb) rather than air-bubble. This study showed that addition of gelatinized rice to bread dough makes the bread with larger loaf volume and soft texture without additional agents such as gluten.  相似文献   

7.
The aim of the research was the development of an alternative formula for gluten‐free bread (GFB) containing amaranth flour. GFBs were prepared using a 23 factorial screening experimental design. The amount of water, albumen and fat varied in order to evaluate their impact on the textural, structural and sensory characteristics of the final product. Water amount had the greatest influence on bread characteristics. For a 33% water content increase (from 0.6 to 0.8 g g?1 of flour) the firmness of the crumb decreased to 20% of the initial value. Also, for the same water content increase, the average pore size became 2.5‐fold greater. Albumen addition (from 0 to 0.04 g g?1 of flour) influenced mainly crumb viscoelasticity (20% increase). Variations in fat amount did not significantly influence any of the response variables investigated. However, the combined addition of fat and albumen resulted in breads that received the best rankings in overall acceptance in sensory evaluation.  相似文献   

8.
Common buckwheat flour (BF) was used to substitute 10%, 20%, 30% and 40% of corn starch, the main component of a gluten‐free bread formula, to make buckwheat‐enhanced gluten‐free breads. The 40% BF‐enhanced gluten‐free bread showed the highest antioxidant capacity against ABTS+˙ and DPPH˙ radicals (4.1 and 2.5 μmol Trolox g?1 DM, respectively) and reducing capacity measured by cyclic voltammetry (1.5 μmol Trolox g?1 DM). The antioxidant and reducing capacity of buckwheat‐enhanced gluten‐free breads were positively correlated with their total phenolic contents (r = 0.97). The 40% BF‐enhanced gluten‐free bread showed the highest overall sensory quality (7.1 units) when compared to control gluten‐free bread (1.8 units). The linear relationship between applied increasing BF doses in gluten‐free bread formula and magnesium, phosphorus and potassium content in breads was noted. It was concluded that 40% BF‐enhanced gluten‐free bread could be developed and dedicated to those people suffering from coeliac disease.  相似文献   

9.
The significance of high hydrostatic pressure (HHP) processing on the physico-chemical—techno-functional and firming kinetics—parameters and nutritional properties—nutritional composition and “in vitro” starch digestibility—of highly replaced wheat flour breads by chickpea, pea and soybean flours was investigated, and the power/effectiveness of HHP in partially replacing structural agents (gluten and/or hydrocolloids) was discussed. Incorporation of pressured legume slurries (350 MPa, 10 min) at 42% of wheat replacement into bread formulation provoked a general increase in initial crumb hardness and browning of the crust with a concomitant explicit reduction of moisture, whiteness of the crumb and bread specific volume, but a slower in vitro starch digestibility with prominent formation of slowly digestible starch and resistant starch, compared to their counterparts prepared by using a conventional gluten/carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC)-added breadmaking recipe/process. Pressured breads with no gluten but 3% CMC in the formulation kept higher sensory ratings, softer initial texture and lower firming profiles on ageing than pressured breads with no gluten nor CMC. HHP has proven to be an effective technology to partially replace structuring agents (CMC and/or gluten) in high-legume wheat-based matrices providing sensorially acceptable breads with medium physico-chemical quality profile but enhanced formation of nutritionally relevant starch fractions and slower crumb firming kinetics on ageing.  相似文献   

10.
A gluten-free wheat bread replacement was developed from rice flour (80%) and potato starch (20%). Using objective measurements as responses, response surface methodology was utilized to find carboxymethylcellulose (CMC)-hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC)-water combinations which could successfully replace gluten in the rice flour yeast breads from each of three rice flours. CMC and water had the greatest effect on the responses measured; HPMC had the least. Rice bread formulations were found that resulted in breads which met wheat (white) bread reference standards for specific volume, crumb and crust color, Instron firmness and % moisture.  相似文献   

11.
Baking technology for tasty bread with high wholemeal oat content and good texture was developed. Bread was baked with a straight baking process using whole grain oat (51/100 g flour) and white wheat (49/100 g four). The effects of gluten and water content, dough mixing time, proofing temperature and time, and baking conditions on bread quality were investigated using response surface methodology with a central composite design. Response variables measured were specific volume, instrumental crumb hardness, and sensory texture, mouthfeel, and flavour. The concentration and molecular weight distribution of β-glucan were analysed both from the flours and the bread. Light microscopy was used to locate β-glucan in the bread. Proofing conditions, gluten, and water content had a major effect on specific volume and hardness of the oat bread. The sensory crumb properties were mainly affected by ingredients, whereas processing conditions exhibited their main effects on crust properties and richness of the crumb flavour. β-glucan content of oat bread was 1.3/100 g bread. The proportion of the highest molecular weight fraction of β-glucan was decreased as compared with the original β-glucan content of oat/wheat flour. A great part of β-glucan in bread was located in the large bran pieces.  相似文献   

12.
Anti-staling agents with different mechanisms were added to a normal white wheat bread to investigate the relation between bread staling, amylopectin retrogradation and water-related properties (i.e. water content and distribution between crumb and crust). Bread was baked both as pan-baked and freestanding loaves. The anti-staling agents maltogenic α-amylase, distilled monoglyceride and lipase had a direct influence on starch retrogradation, whereas gluten and waxy wheat flour diluted the amylopectin content or changed the ratio between amylose and amylopectin. The degree of staling was measured as the firmness and springiness, together with two new methods, crumbliness and cutability. In addition, the degrees of amylopectin retrogradation and amylose–lipid complex formation were analyzed by differential scanning calorimetry, and the water content, water loss and water migration were measured. The addition of α-amylase improved most staling parameters, although the changes were not as large as expected. Furthermore, monoglyceride and lipase increased the formation of amylose–lipid complexes, but only lipase gave better results regarding the specific volume and firmness. Increased amylose–lipid complex formation was seen to increase water migration from crumb to crust. Adding 10% waxy wheat flour appeared to lead to a slight overall improvement i.e. lower water migration and better cutability. Adding gluten or 3% waxy wheat flour only improved the specific volume. The method of baking the loaves, i.e. freestanding or pan-baked, had a greater influence than the anti-staling agents, which shows that bread quality is not always improved by starch affecting anti-staling agents without process changes.  相似文献   

13.
Free amino acids, peptides, and vital wheat gluten were investigated to determine their effect on the mixing and frozen dough baking properties of wheat flour. Addition of 1% cysteine and aspartic acid decreased and glutamic acid, histidine, arginine, and lysine increased the mixing tolerance of flour. Cystine, methionine, tryptophan, and phenylalanine increased but isoleucine, histidine, glycine, arginine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid, and lysine decreased loaf volume of nonfrozen dough breads. However cystine, methionine, tryptophan, and phenylalanine did not increase loaf volume of bread prepared from frozen dough. Vital wheat gluten increased mixing tolerance and bread loaf volume only for the nonfrozen dough. However, wheat gluten hydrolysate, corn, and bonito peptides decreased mixing tolerance after optimum mixing time and were effective in increasing loaf volume for both frozen and nonfrozen dough. As the amount of corn and bonito peptide increased, specific loaf volumes also increased. Addition of 2.5% corn peptide was most effective in increasing loaf volume of frozen dough bread. Crust browning and crumb stickiness increased, whereas crumb softness decreased with addition of peptides. Addition of less than 1% peptide did not adversely affect the aftertaste and off‐flavor of bread. These results suggest that addition of peptides are effective for improving the baking quality of frozen dough, whereas amino acids and gluten have no effect.  相似文献   

14.
目的 研究穇子馒头生产工艺及其抗氧化性.方法 采用单因素试验和正交试验,以感官评分为评价指标,研究穇子粉添加量、谷朊粉添加量、酵母的添加量和发酵时间对馒头品质的影响,并通过羟基自由基清除法分析穇子馒头的体外抗氧化效果.结果 穇子馒头的最佳工艺条件为:以高筋面粉100 g为基准,穇子粉添加量20 g、谷朊粉添加量15 g...  相似文献   

15.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of the addition of pomegranate seed powder (PSP) on physical, sensorial and antioxidant properties of gluten‐free bread. The PSP was incorporated at different levels (2.5%, 5.0%, 7.5% and 10%) into formula of gluten‐free bread. Control gluten‐free bread made without any addition of PSP was used for comparison. The results showed that the specific volume and springiness of gluten‐free breads increased, whereas hardness and chewiness decreased significantly with increasing PSP addition. The addition of PSP into gluten‐free bread decreased the lightness and yellowness of crumb and crust colour, while redness increased. Total phenolics content (TPC) increased from 46% to 181% with PSP addition (2.5%–10%). Moreover, antioxidant activity was significantly higher for bread with PSP. For bread with the highest percentage of PSP, the highest antioxidant activity was obtained. For sensorial and antioxidant activity, the optimum level of PSP addition was found to be 7.5%.  相似文献   

16.
Substitution of regular and waxy hull-less barley flour was evaluated in pan breads prepared from the blends of barley cvs. Saessal (SSWB) and Saechalssal (SCWB) with wheat flour. Effect of barley type and barley flour level (10, 20, and 30%) was investigated on compositions, dough development, and bread qualities. Compared to 100% wheat flour, increasing barley flour increased ash from 0.36 to 0.67%, and β-glucan from 0.1 to 1.91%. Pasting viscosity exhibited higher peak viscosity, through, and breakdown in barley flour blends, showing higher viscosity in SSWB than SCWB. Optimum water absorption and mixing time were increased in barley-wheat flour blends. Substitution of 10% barley flour had no significant difference from wheat bread in bread volume and crumb firmness statistically (p<0.05). The SSWB showed better bread qualities in terms of bread volume and crumb firmness than SCWB. The β-glucan content was 0.13% in wheat bread, but ranged from 0.45 to 1.05% in barley breads.  相似文献   

17.
Pan bread formulations based on raw wheat germ, vital wheat gluten, and enzyme-active soybean flour were optimized with the objective of developing a phytochemical-enriched designer food product with superior nutritional and sensory qualities. The objective texture values (measured as compression force, g) indicated that the test bread with 10% wheat germ addition was comparable (299.9 g) to the control (210.1 g), but the compression force was significantly higher (415.4 g) at 20% wheat germ level. With 0.5% sodium stearoyl-2-lactylate (SSL), 30 ppm potassium bromate and 50 ppm ascorbic acid, the test breads with 10 and 20% wheat germ had compression force values of 313.8 g and 367.7 g, respectively. Comparing the CIE L*a* values, the test bread samples having up to 20% wheat germ were slightly darker in crumb color than the white flour control bread, but were significantly lighter than the whole wheat flour bread. However, the addition of wheat germ increased the yellow color of bread crumb as indicated by the higher b* values of 11.4, 16.4 and 21.4, for control, 10% and 20% wheat germ breads, respectively. The physical texture and objective color measurements can be used in evaluating the quality of a phytochemical-enriched designer food (pan bread). It can be concluded that wheat germ-enriched bread can be prepared by using white flour, 20% raw wheat germ, 0.5% SSL, 30 ppm potassium bromate and 50 ppm ascorbic acid to provide consumers with a functional food.  相似文献   

18.
The chemical modification of rice flour by phosphorylation is an alternative to improve the technological quality of bakery products. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of phosphorylation process of rice flour on technological properties (specific volume, crumb and crust colour) of gluten‐free breads and the hardening of these breads during two storage temperatures (21 °C and ?24 °C). Breads were made with native rice flour, with phosphorylated rice flour and with wheat flour, used as control. The phosphorylation causes significant reduction in the synaeresis of pastes and in retrogradation tendency of rice flours, varying from 258.7 cP (native rice flour) to 122 cP (phosphorylated rice flour). The breads prepared with phosphorylated rice flour showed reduction in the hardness in both storage temperatures studied and effect on rice bread volume, crumb appearance and colour, demonstrating the possibility of use of the phosphorylated rice flour in gluten‐free breads.  相似文献   

19.
The objective of this work was to assess the effect of emulsifiers, hydrocolloids and enzymes on gluten-free dough rheology and thermal properties and bread quality, while relating dough properties parameters to bread technological quality. Breads were based on rice flour, cassava starch and full-fat active soy flour, with 65% or 75% (flour-starch basis) of water incorporation. Additives used were emulsifiers (diacetyl tartaric acid ester of monoglycerides – DATEM and sodium stearoyl lactylate – SSL), enzymes (glucose oxidase and α-amylase) and hydrocolloids (xanthan gum, carboxymethylcellulose, alginate and carrageenan). Results showed that additive incorporation modified dough behavior, evidenced by different calorimetric and rheological properties. Besides, the electrophoretic pattern of dough extracted proteins changed with glucose oxidase addition. These modifications resulted in breads with different characteristics, such as specific volume, firmness and firming rate, and crumb structure. Nonetheless, they did not necessarily show better quality parameters than the control bread. The control dough displayed good performance for obtaining gluten-free breads of acceptable volume, crumb structure and, principally, with lower hardening rate during storage. Contrary to widespread opinion, this work shows that the presence of additives is not essential for gluten-free bread production. This fact provides new perspectives to the gluten free market at the moment of selecting raw materials and technological parameters, reducing production costs and facilitating gluten free products development.  相似文献   

20.
The potential utilization of yellow pea flour and bread crumb blends was investigated to generate nutritionally-dense extruded products with superior physical and/or technofunctional properties. Yellow pea flour mixed with bread crumb at different ratios were processed using low-moisture twin-screw extrusion cooking conditions to examine the effect of blending ratios and feed moisture contents on physical (that is, radial expansion index, extrudate density, microstructure, texture, and color) and technofunctional (that is, emulsifying capacity, emulsifying stability, water solubility [WS], water binding capacity [WBC], oil binding capacity [OBC], and pasting) properties of the final products. Compared to the two feed materials alone, samples produced with yellow pea flour and bread crumb blends showed lower hardness and higher crispiness. Moisture content (12% to 18%) was found to significantly affect physical and technofunctional properties. With an increase in feed moisture content from 12% to 18%, the WBC of the extrudates increased while the WS decreased. Extrudates produced with higher feed moisture content, and higher yellow pea flour content had higher setback viscosity. Among all formulas and feed moisture contents studied, extrudates produced with 50% yellow pea flour and 50% bread crumb at 12% feed moisture content had the highest radial expansion and bigger cells with thinner cell walls. This study has shown that incorporation of yellow pea flour and bread crumb in extrusion cooking process could be used to develop nutritionally-dense foods with improved physical and technofunctional properties.  相似文献   

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