Utilization of malted barley flour as replacement of wheat flour to improve technological, rheological, physicochemical, and organoleptic parameters of fortified breads

verfasst von
Jawed Aslam, Ashiq Hussain, Ghulam Mueen Ud-Din, Tusneem Kausar, Tahira Siddique, Khurram Kabir, Faiza Iftikhar Gorsi, Haseeb Haroon, Rizwan Nisar, Saima Noreen, João Miguel Rocha, Fatih Ozogul, Tuba Esatbeyoglu, Sameh A. Korma
Abstract

Introduction: Flours from cereal grains have the potential to be used in the production of bakery products, especially breads, and the addition of other non–wheat plant materials in the form of flours, extracts and malts has always been the area of interest for food producers. Methods: In this research work, barley grains were converted into barley malt flour (BMF), by adopting a series of processes, including steeping, germination, kilning, drying and milling. With the aim of compensating the role of commercial bread improvers, wheat flour was replaced at 0, 2.5, 5, 7.5, and 10% levels with BMF, to study the effect of BMF on physicochemical and sensory characteristics of bread. Results and discussion: Chemical analysis of flours revealed that ash, fat, moisture, protein and fibers were found greater in BMF and BMF–incorporated composite flours, as compared to wheat flour. Significant increases in water absorption and decrease in dough stability, dough development time and falling number were noticed, as a result of an increase in the replacement level of BMF. Water absorption of control dough was 58.03%, which increased to 58.77% in composite flour having 10% BMF, whereas dough development time, dough stability and α–amylase activity of control, were 6.97 min, 12 min, and 736 s, respectively, which were decreased to 3.83 min, 4.73 min, and 360 s, respectively in composite flour having 10% BMF. The internal and external characteristics of breads obtained the best sensorial score at 5% replacement level of BMF, and deterioration in the quality of breads was noticed, as the level of BMF was further increased to 7.5 and 10%. Hence, breads developed with 5% BMF and 95% wheat flour, were not only nutritionally rich, but were also with optimum physical and sensory features. BMF could prove a useful alternate ingredient of wheat flour, and a cost-effective replacement of commercially available bread improvers, in the breads manufacturing process in replacement of synthetic bread improvers.

Organisationseinheit(en)
Institut für Lebensmittelwissenschaft und Humanernährung
Molekulare Lebensmittelchemie und -entwicklung
Externe Organisation(en)
University of Sargodha
Punjab Food Authority
University of Arid Agriculture Rawalpindi
Universidade Católica Portuguesa (UCP)
Universidade do Porto
Cukurova University
South China University of Technology
Zagazig University
Typ
Artikel
Journal
Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
Band
7
Publikationsdatum
27.09.2023
Publikationsstatus
Veröffentlicht
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Globaler Wandel, Lebensmittelwissenschaften, Ökologie, Agronomie und Nutzpflanzenwissenschaften, Management, Monitoring, Politik und Recht, Gartenbau
Elektronische Version(en)
https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2023.1230374 (Zugang: Offen)