4.7 Article

Improving quality: Modified celluloses applied to bread dough with high level of resistant starch

Journal

FOOD HYDROCOLLOIDS
Volume 112, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodhyd.2020.106302

Keywords

Hydroxypropylmethylcellulose; Carboxymethylcellulose; Type 2 resistant maize starch; Rheology; Microstructure; CLSM

Funding

  1. ANPCyT [PICT 2014-3421, PICT 2013-0007, PICT 2016-3047]
  2. Universidad Nacional de La Plata [X661, X771]

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Additives in the baking industry have long been used to correct the quality deficiency of wheat flour and have expanded their action field to include the production of new functional foods. In this study, two modified celluloses were evaluated as additives in bread dough enriched with resistant maize starch, showing improvement in technological quality and gluten network structure. The results suggest that the addition of modified celluloses can lead to a more cross-linked gluten network and improved stability, resulting in high fiber-enriched, good-quality bread.
Additives have been used in the baking industry for a long time with many purposes, and their use is frequently focused on correcting the quality deficiency of wheat flour. Nevertheless, with the flourishing search for novel functional baked goods, additives have seen expanded their action field since they can exert a quality rectification effect also when novel ingredients are assessed to obtain new functional foods. In this work, two modified celluloses (MC), hydroxypropylmethylcellulose and carboxymethylcellulose, were evaluated as additives for the recovering of rheological and microstructural quality of bread dough enriched with 30% type 2 resistant maize starch (flour basis). The results showed that both MC effectively improved the technological quality of the dough by enhancing the farinographic performance and reducing the high storage modulus of the resistant starch dough without additives. Moreover, only slight modifications were found over the loss modulus and the pasting properties. The observation of the gluten network by CLSM showed that the addition of the MC leads to a more cross-linked and complex gluten network which would explain the longer stability values of the MC-added dough samples found in the farinographic tests. This positive effect would be explained by hydrocolloid-gluten protein interactions as well as by the higher amount of water needed for the preparation of the dough. Finally, the work showed that the use of MC would be a suitable option to get rheology-balanced bread dough that leads to a highly fiber-enriched and good-quality bread.

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