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Gluten-free dough-making of specialty breads: Significance of blended starches, flours and additives on dough behaviour
- Source :
- Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Sage Publications, 2015.
-
Abstract
- The capability of different gluten-free (GF) basic formulations made of flour (rice, amaranth and chickpea) and starch (corn and cassava) blends, to make machinable and viscoelastic GF-doughs in absence/presence of single hydrocolloids (guar gum, locust bean and psyllium fibre), proteins (milk and egg white) and surfactants (neutral, anionic and vegetable oil) have been investigated. Macroscopic (high deformation) and macromolecular (small deformation) mechanical, viscometric (gelatinization, pasting, gelling) and thermal (gelatinization, melting, retrogradation) approaches were performed on the different matrices in order to (a) identify similarities and differences in GF-doughs in terms of a small number of rheological and thermal analytical parameters according to the formulations and (b) to assess single and interactive effects of basic ingredients and additives on GF-dough performance to achieve GF-flat breads. Larger values for the static and dynamic mechanical characteristics and higher viscometric profiles during both cooking and cooling corresponded to doughs formulated with guar gum and Psyllium fibre added to rice flour/starch and rice flour/corn starch/chickpea flour, while surfactant- and protein-formulated GF-doughs added to rice flour/starch/amaranth flour based GF-doughs exhibited intermediate and lower values for the mechanical parameters and poorer viscometric profiles. In addition, additive-free formulations exhibited higher values for the temperature of both gelatinization and retrogradation and lower enthalpies for the thermal transitions. Single addition of 10% of either chickpea flour or amaranth flour to rice flour/starch blends provided a large GF-dough hardening effect in presence of corn starch and an intermediate effect in presence of cassava starch (chickpea), and an intermediate reinforcement of GF-dough regardless the source of starch (amaranth). At macromolecular level, both chickpea and amaranth flours, singly added, determined higher values of the storage modulus, being strengthening effects more pronounced in presence of corn starch and cassava starch, respectively.<br />The authors acknowledge the financial support of Regione Autonoma della Sardegna, Legge 7, project title “Ottimizzazione della formulazione e della tecnologia di processo per la produzione di prodotti da forno gluten-free fermentati e non fermentati” and Spanish institutions Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC) and Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Project AGL2011-22669).
- Subjects :
- Dietary Fiber
Manihot
food.ingredient
Dough
Chemical Phenomena
Retrogradation (starch)
Starch
General Chemical Engineering
Flour
Amaranth
Galactans
Zea mays
Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
Mannans
Diet, Gluten-Free
Surface-Active Agents
chemistry.chemical_compound
food
Plant Gums
Food Quality
Humans
Cooking
Food science
Additive
Plantago
Mechanical Phenomena
Gluten-free
Amaranthus
Guar gum
Oryza
Viscoelasticity
Bread
Dynamic mechanical analysis
Psyllium
Cicer
Vegetable oil
Food Storage
chemistry
Seeds
Food Additives
Gluten free
Dietary Proteins
Food Science
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....61400fbf483a3cd085ac9d495f1ab12a