| Literature DB >> 30400580 |
Marina Carcea1, Valentina Narducci2, Valeria Turfani3, Altero Aguzzi4.
Abstract
A nationwide survey on salt content in both artisanal and industrial bread was undertaken in Italy to establish a baseline for salt reduction initiatives. Excess sodium intake in the diet is associated with high blood pressure and the risk of cardiovascular diseases. Bread has been identified as a major contributor to salt intake in the Italian diet. Most of the bread consumed in Italy comes from artisanal bakeries so 135 artisanal bread were sampled in 56 locations from Northern to Southern Italy together with 19 samples of industrial bread representative of the entire Italian production. Sodium chloride content was analysed according to the Volhardt's method. A salt content between 0.7% and 2.3% g/100 g (as is basis) was found, with a mean value of 1.5% (Standard Deviation, 0.3). However, the majority of samples (58%) had a content below 1.5%, with 12% having a very low salt content (between 0.5% and 1.0%), whereas the remaining 42% had a salt content higher than the mean value with a very high salt content (>2.0%) recorded for 3% of samples. As regards the industrial bread, an average content of 1.6% was found (SD, 0.3). In this group, most of the samples (56%) had a very high content between 2.0% and 2.5%, whereas 5% only had a content between 1.1% and 1.5%. Statistics on salt content are also reported for the different categories of bread.Entities:
Keywords: artisanal bread; industrial bread; salt; sodium chloride
Year: 2018 PMID: 30400580 PMCID: PMC6262640 DOI: 10.3390/foods7110181
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Figure 1Bread samples collected in the different regions of Northern, Central and Southern Italy. (a) Number of samples from each Italian region. Northern regions are coloured in dark grey, Central regions in white and Southern regions in light grey (division according to the Italian Central Institute of Statistics). (b) Bread samples of different size, shape and ingredients.
Sodium content in flour and bread samples as measured by two methods of different sensitivity.
| Sample | Sodium Content Volhardt * (g/100 g) | Sodium Content ICP * (g/100 g) |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial white flour (Italian type 00) | not analysed | not detected |
| Commercial white flour (Italian type 0) | not analysed | not detected |
| Sample 1 (bread without salt, 500 g) | not detected | not detected |
| Sample 4 (bread without salt, 500 g) | not detected | not detected |
| Sample 14 (bread without salt, 500 g) | not detected | not detected |
| Sample 32 (common bread, 95 g) | 0.3 | 0.2249 |
| Sample 38 (wholemeal sourdough bread, 1.5 kg) | 0.4 | 0.3283 |
| Sample 25 (durum wheat bread, 170 g) | 0.6 | 0.4902 |
| Sample 57 (sourdough bread, 2 kg) | 0.3 | 0.1970 |
| Sample 67 (special bread, 200 g) | 0.6 | 0.4552 |
* Average of two determinations on as is sample.
Figure 2Percent distribution of bread samples according to salt content classes.
Figure 3Percent distribution of industrial bread samples according to salt content classes.
Figure 4Percent distribution of artisanal bread samples of different weight according to salt content classes.
Figure 5Per cent distribution of artisanal bread samples, differing in dough formulation and leavening method, according to salt content classes.