4.7 Article

The Contribution of Scalded and Scalded-Fermented Rye Wholemeal Flour to Quality Parameters and Acrylamide Formation in Semi-Wheat-Rye Bread

Journal

FOODS
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods12050937

Keywords

bread; scalding; fermentation; acrylamide; lactic acid bacteria

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The study evaluated the effects of scalded and scalded-fermented rye wholemeal flour on the quality and acrylamide formation of semi-wheat-rye bread. Scalding increased the content of fructose, glucose, and maltose, while scalded fermentation increased the concentration of certain amino acids, including GABA. Addition of scalded and scalded-fermented flour influenced bread shape, mass loss, color coordinates, and hardness. Scalded-fermented flour improved bread color, flavor, acceptability, and delayed staling, but resulted in higher acrylamide levels compared to the control.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of scalded (Sc) and scalded-fermented (FSc) (with Lactiplantibacillus paracasei No. 244 strain) rye wholemeal flour on the quality parameters and acrylamide formation in semi-wheat-rye bread. To that purpose, 5, 10 and 15% of Sc and FSc were used for bread production. Results showed that scalding increased fructose, glucose and maltose content in rye wholemeal. Lower concentrations of free amino acids were found in Sc when compared with rye wholemeal, but fermentation of Sc increased the concentrations of some amino acids (on average by 1.51 times), including gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA, by 1.47 times). Addition of Sc and FSc had a significant influence (p <= 0.05) on bread shape coefficient, mass loss after baking and most bread colour coordinates. Most of the breads with Sc or FSc showed lower hardness after 72 h of storage compared with the control (i.e., without Sc or FSc). FSc improved bread colour and flavour, as well as overall acceptability. Breads with 5 and 10% of Sc had a similar level of acrylamide to the control, while its level in breads with FSc was higher (on average, 236.3 mu g/kg). Finally, different types and amounts of scald had varying effects on the quality of the semi-wheat-rye bread. FSc delayed staling and improved sensory properties and acceptability, as well as the GABA level of wheat-rye bread, while the same level of acrylamide as was seen in control bread could be reached when using between 5 and 10% of scalded rye wholemeal flour.

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