4.7 Article

Reinvigorating Modern Breadmaking Based on Ancient Practices and Plant Ingredients, with Implementation of a Physicochemical Approach

Journal

FOODS
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods10040789

Keywords

prehistoric grinding practices; ancient grain flours; breadmaking; starch gelatinization; dough rheology; bread quality parameters

Funding

  1. European Research Council project PlantCult: identifying the food cultures of ancient Europe, under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [682529]

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This study explored the potential use of ancient plant ingredients in emerging bakery products based on possible prehistoric and/or ancient practices. The results showed that incorporating ancient plant ingredients into contemporary bread formulations seems to be feasible.
In this study, the potential use of ancient plant ingredients in emerging bakery products based on possible prehistoric and/or ancient practices of grinding and breadmaking was explored. Various ancient grains, nuts and seeds (einkorn wheat, barley, acorn, lentil, poppy seeds, linseed) were ground using prehistoric grinding tool replicas. Barley-based sourdough prepared by multiple back-slopping steps was added to dough made from einkorn alone or mixed with the above ingredients (20% level) or commercial flours alone (common wheat, spelt, barley). Sieving analysis showed that 40% of the einkorn flour particles were >400 mu m, whereas commercial barley and common wheat flours were finer. Differential scanning calorimetry revealed that lentil flour exhibited higher melting peak temperature and lower apparent enthalpy of starch gelatinization. Among all bread formulations tested, barley dough exhibited the highest elastic modulus and complex viscosity, as determined by dynamic rheometry; einkorn breads fortified with linseed and barley had the softest and hardest crust, respectively, as indicated by texture analysis; and common wheat gave the highest loaf-specific volume. Barley sourdough inclusion into einkorn dough did not affect the extent of starch retrogradation in the baked product. Generally, incorporation of ancient plant ingredients into contemporary bread formulations seems to be feasible.

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