4.5 Article

Potential of moringa leaf and baobab fruit food-to-food fortification of wholegrain maize porridge to improve iron and zinc bioaccessibility

Journal

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09637486.2021.1911962

Keywords

Adansonia digitata; iron bioavailability; mineral fortification; Moringa oleifera; wholegrain

Funding

  1. United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Bureau for Food Security under Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Food Processing and Post-harvest Handling [AID-OAA-L-14-00003]
  2. SA National Research Foundation (NRF)
  3. World Academy of Sciences (TWAS) [UID 105494]
  4. University of Pretoria
  5. NRF [119549]

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The study found that food-to-food fortification with moringa leaf and/or baobab fruit can improve the iron and zinc nutritive quality in African-type wholegrain maize-based porridges. While moringa leaf fortification may decrease the bioavailability of iron and zinc, baobab fruit fortification can enhance their bioavailability, especially when combined with conventional iron fortification.
Food-to-food fortification (FtFF) with moringa leaf (iron source) and/or baobab fruit (citric acid and ascorbic acid source) (each 13-15 g/100 g porridge dry basis (db)) was studied to improve iron and zinc nutritive quality in African-type wholegrain maize-based porridges using in vitro dialysability assay. Moringa FtFF decreased percentage and total bioaccessible iron and zinc, by up to 84% and 45%, respectively. Moringa was very high in calcium, approximately 3% db and calcium-iron-phytate complexes inhibit iron bioavailability. Baobab FtFF increased percentage and total bioaccessible iron and zinc, especially in porridges containing carrot + mango (beta-carotene source) and conventionally fortified with FeSO4, by up to 111% and 60%, respectively. The effects were similar to those when ascorbic and citric acids were added as mineral absorption enhancers. While moringa FtFF could be inhibitory to iron and zinc bioavailability in cereal-based porridges, baobab fruit FtFF could improve their bioavailability, especially in combination with conventional iron fortification.

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