1. In Vitro Starch Digestibility of Gluten-Free Spaghetti Based on Maize, Chickpea, and Unripe Plantain Flours
- Author
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Luis A. Bello-Pérez, Rubí G. Utrilla-Coello, Edith Agama-Acevedo, Bruce R. Hamaker, and Pamela C. Flores-Silva
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,Chemistry ,Starch ,Organic Chemistry ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,food and beverages ,Gluten intolerance ,Carbohydrate ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,food ,Gluten-free spaghetti ,Food science ,Control sample ,Resistant starch ,Food Science - Abstract
Gluten-free and high indigestible carbohydrate food development is a topic that deserves investigation because of an increased focus on gluten intolerance and celiac disease and on metabolic disorders caused by overweight and obesity. Here, chickpea and maize flours were used as sources of protein and carbohydrate (because of the level used in the mixture) and unripe plantain as an indigestible carbohydrate source in composite gluten-free spaghetti elaboration. The mixture of unripe plantain, chickpea, and maize was used at different levels to prepare spaghetti (samples S15Pla and S25Pla); control pasta was made of 100% semolina (S100Sem), and a 100% unripe plantain flour (S100Pla) pasta was also evaluated. In vitro amylolysis rate of fresh and stored (three and five days) spaghetti was assessed. The spaghetti with 100% unripe plantain (S100Pla) had higher resistant starch (RS) content than the control sample and the two cooked composite gluten-free spaghettis (S15Pla, S25Pla), and RS further increased wi...
- Published
- 2015
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