4.7 Article

Effect of aleurone-rich flour on composition, baking, textural, and sensory properties of bread

Journal

LWT-FOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 65, Issue -, Pages 762-769

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.lwt.2015.08.073

Keywords

Bread; Aleurone; Texture analysis; Sensory profiling; Penalty analysis

Funding

  1. project of Health Promotion and Tradition: Development of raw materials, functional foods and technologies in cereal-based food chain [TECH_08_A3/2-2008-0425]
  2. project of The relationships of bread making quality properties of wheat with the composition of gluten and pentosan [80334 CK]
  3. project of Development of quality oriented, harmonized educational and R+D+I strategy and operational model at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics [TAMOP-4.2.1/B-09/1/KMR-2010-0002]

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The bread making potential of a recently developed, large-scale produced, wheat aleurone-rich flour (ARF) was examined in a laboratory-scale bread model product. Blends of wheat flour and ARF were examined. ARF was suitable for bread making; it improved the nutritional balance of bread compared to wheat flour (WF). The AB (aleurone-rich flour made bread) product contained considerably less available carbohydrate (25.8 versus 43.52 g/100 g), while contained higher amount of crude protein (13.26 versus 8.04 g/100 g), crude fat (1.03 versus 0.07 g/100g), ash (238 versus 0.98 g/100 g), dietary fibre (10.62 versus 2.84 g/100 g), and total arabinoxylan (5.44 versus 1.89 g/100g) than white bread (WB). AB had higher dietary fibre content and lower available carbohydrate content than whole-meal bread. ARF addition considerably modified the bread quality; reduced loaf size, altered appearance and texture, darker crumb, more intense odour and flavour were observed. AB acceptability was similar to WB acceptability in the selected target consumer group. Penalty analysis showed that the too intense odour, flavour, and bitter taste and the too weak sweet taste affected negatively the AB's acceptability. These negative properties could be eliminated with WF addition; the optimal blending ratio was between 40% and 100%. (C) 2015 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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