| Literature DB >> 30619866 |
Sweta Rai1, Amarjeet Kaur2, C S Chopra1.
Abstract
The gluten protein of wheat triggers an immunological reaction in some gluten-sensitive people with HLA-DQ2/8 genotypes, which leads to Celiac disease (CD) with symptomatic damage in the small intestinal villi. Glutenin and gliadin are two major components of gluten that are essentially required for developing a strong protein network for providing desired viscoelasticity of dough. Many non-gluten cereals and starches (rice, corn, sorghum, millets, and potato/pea starch) and various gluten replacers (xanthan and guar gum) have been used for retaining the physical-sensorial properties of gluten-free, cereal-based products. This paper reviews the recent advances in the formulation of cereal-based, gluten-free products by utilizing alternate flours, starches, gums, hydrocolloids, enzymes, novel ingredients, and processing techniques. The pseudo cereals amaranth, quinoa, and buckwheat, are promising in gluten-free diet formulation. Genetically-modified wheat is another promising area of research, where successful attempts have been made to silence the gliadin gene of wheat using RNAi techniques. The requirement of quantity and quality for gluten-free packaged foods is increasing consistently at a faster rate than lactose-free and diabetic-friendly foods. More research needs to be focused on cereal-based, gluten-free beverages to provide additional options for CD sufferers.Entities:
Keywords: anti-oxidant; celiac disease; cereal; gluten; hydrocolloids; wheat
Year: 2018 PMID: 30619866 PMCID: PMC6304385 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2018.00116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1Iceberg for gluten-sensitive people.
Research methodology along with references for developing new generation gluten-free products.
| Gluten-free flours | Alternate flour | Rice, Corn, Sorghum, Millets | ( |
| Pseudocereals | Buckwheat, Amaranth, Quinoa | ( | |
| Starches | Rice flour and starch, Corn flour and starch, Potato starch, Cassava starch | ( | |
| Genetically Modified Wheat | Gliadin deleted wheat | ( | |
| Legume flour | Soy, Chickpea, Pea, cow pea, Others (Carob, Vinal, Beans, Lentil) | ( | |
| Other flour | Chestnut, Flaxseed, Chia | ( | |
| Functional ingredients | Hydrocolloids | Agarose, Guar gum, Locust bean gum, Hydroxypropyl-methylcellulose, Pectin, Xanthan gum | ( |
| Fiber fortification | Inulin, Rice bran, Pseudo cereals, Psyllium, sugar beet fiber, dietary fiber, Unripe banana flour | ( | |
| Novel processing approaches | Enzymes | Transglutaminase, Protease, Lipase, cyclodextrin glycosyl transferase | ( |
| Lactic acid bacteria/Sour dough | Lactic acid bacteria and yeasts | ( | |
| High pressure/temperature | High pressure and temperature | ( | |
List of recent important formulations of cereal based gluten-free products (2011 onwards).
| 1 | Bread | Used Rice as alternate flour with pseudo cereal and Hydrocolloids | Blend of rice-buckwheat in proportion of 60:40 was used by incorporating Xanthan gum and propylene glycol alginate at levels of 0.5 to 1.5%. The incorporation of both hydrocolloids significantly improved the storage modulus. As compared to Xanthan gum the inclusion of propylene glycol alginate increased specific volume but decreased crumb firmness and crumb structure of gluten-free breads. | ( |
| 2 | Bread | Red sorghum flour was supplemented with different starch | Gluten-free sorghum bread was prepared using cassava, corn, potato, or rice starch and sorghum in the different ratios. Water (100%), sugar (6.7%), egg white powder (6%), fat (2%), salt (1.7%), and yeast (1.5%) were other baking ingredients. Increasing starch content decreased crumb firmness and chewiness but cohesiveness, springiness, and resilience increased in all breads. The cassava-sorghum and rice-sorghum breads had better crumb properties than corn-sorghum or potato-sorghum breads. | ( |
| 3 | Bread | Rice flour was supplemented with acetic acid, lactic acid, citric acid | In order to improve the quality of gluten-free bread, several levels of acidic food additives (acetic acid, lactic acid, citric acid, and monosodium phosphate) was tested for gluten-free breads prepared using rice flour and hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC). It was found that monosodium phosphate yields bread producing better texture scores and yielded the highest volumes of the loaf. | ( |
| 4 | Bread | Non-yeasted gluten-free dough mixtures were prepared by mixing wheat starch with locust bean gum-supplemented with whey protein | Reported about robustness of mesoscopically structured whey protein particle system contributing elasticity and strain hardening properties after mixing with starch up to a certain level. Although whey particles provided lower extensibility but were more stable than gluten particles. For reducing the stiffness of dough for better bread making, the N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) treatment blocked formation of excessive number disulphide bonds (essential for bread making dough) of a mesoscopic whey protein. | ( |
| 5 | Bread | Corn starch, potato starch, pectin, sunflower oil, fresh yeast were the basic ingredients of gluten-free bread. Calcium fortification was done | Palatability of gluten-free breads fortified with calcium was significantly higher than those of unfortified control. The addition of calcium caseinate and calcium citrate improved desirable sensory attributes (sweet odor, butter bread odor, butter bread taste, and springiness) for the consumers in comparison to unfortified control. The crumbs of calcium-fortified breads were softer and more elastic. | ( |
| 6 | Bread | Rice flour supplemented with different grades of pseudo cereals | Dough made with higher amount of light buckwheat flour (LBF) or wholegrain flour (WBF) with rice flour resulted in final products with higher antioxidant properties. Bread prepared using whole grain buckwheat flour had higher antioxidative activity than bread prepared with light buckwheat flour. | ( |
| 7 | Bread | Rice flour was supplemented with egg protein, fat, dietary fiber (DF) | Rice bran containing gluten-free breads improved protein and dietary fiber content and the ratio of insoluble dietary fiber to soluble dietary fiber. A rice bran source with high soluble dietary fiber content increased sensory acceptance and shelf life. | ( |
| 8 | Bread | Range of commercial gluten-free flours was used | Breads produced only from oat flour were of similar quality to wheat bread, and the utilization of buckwheat, rice, maize, quinoa, sorghum and teff flours resulted in breads of inferior quality. | ( |
| 9 | Bread | Sorghum flour with sourdough was used and exopolysaccharides incorporation as hydrocolloids | The sucrose formed Exopolysaccharides (EPS) during sourdough fermentation, improving the technological properties of gluten-free breads and had the potential to mimic hydrocolloids. The EPS yielded softer crumbs in the fresh and stored sorghum bread. Among EPS, dextran revealed the best shelf life improvements. All strains (Dextran forming | ( |
| 10 | Bread | Used emulsifiers (diacetyl tartaric acid ester of monoglycerides and sodium stearoyllactylate), hydrocolloids and enzymes (glucose oxidase and α-amylase) in gluten-free bread formulations | The electrophoretic pattern of dough extracted proteins changed with glucose oxidase addition. Contrary to widespread opinion, it was observed that the presence of additives is not essential for gluten-free bread production. It suggested to find new alternate raw materials and technological parameters for facilitating gluten-free product development at lower cost. | ( |
| 11 | Bread | Dough prepared using corn starch, potato starch, guar gum, pectin, and freeze-dried yeasts. Native starch was replaced | The native starch was replaced with high amylose corn starch (HACS), acetylated distarchadipate (ADA), and hydroxypropyldistarch phosphate (HDP). Incorporation of 10 or 15% of HDP or ADA increased volume of gluten-free loaves. On the day of baking a slight decrease in hardness and chewiness of the crumb was noticed whereas HACS deteriorated structural and mechanical properties of the crumb. | ( |
| 12 | Bread | Corn starch was used in combination with various cereal-based proteins | The chickpea-based bread exhibited had better physico-chemical characteristics and sensory behavior than soya protein with other legume protein-based gluten-free breads. | ( |
| 13 | Bread | Corn flour with tapioca starch was used and supplemented with plant and animal protein | A blend of tapioca starch and corn flour (80:20) was used with bread ingredients water, yeast, salt, and sugar. The optimum bread had highest levels of fat and soybean flour and one egg, presented low values of firmness (≤100 N) and elasticity (>65%) and the lowest variation of these parameters with storage. Therefore, tapioca starch-based breads had spongy crumb, high volume, and a good sensory acceptance. | ( |
| 14 | Bread | Used corn starch as alternate flour followed byincorporation of proteins.Response surface methodology | The gluten-free bread prepared by using ingredients albumin, collagen, pea, lupine and soy protein to replace the starch in a gluten-free formulation and revealed that bread with pea protein was most acceptable among different analyzed samples, while least sensory acceptance was observed in the case of a product with soy protein | ( |
| 15 | Bread | Rice flour was used along with different combinations of alternate flours supplemented with hydrocolloids | The HPMC had linearly a positive effect on volume of teff and corn breads and a negative linear effect on this parameter in rice breads, without change in volume of buckwheat bread. Xanthan addition had most linearly negative effect on loaf volume of all breads. HPMC addition reduced crumb hardness of teff, buckwheat, corn, and rice bread, whereas Xanthan increased the crumb hardness of teff and buckwheat breads, but rice breadcrumb remained uninfluenced. | ( |
| 16 | Bread | Used millet and pseudocereals | The | ( |
| 17 | Bread | Corn starch, rice flour, rice starch were supplemented with psyllium and sugar beet fiber | The syllium, sugar beet fiber improved doughs, but psyllium had a pivotal role on gluten-free bread preparation because of its film-forming ability and had more effective anti-staling effect with water binding capacity. | ( |
| 18 | Bread | Used rice flour treated with protease | Bread prepared from rice treated with a commercial protease from Bacillus stearothermophilus (thermoase) was of higher quality, i.e., good crumb appearance, high volume, and soft texture, depending on the amount of enzyme added. Many cellular structures were formed in the thermoase-treated bread which was missing in the untreated control. Bread crumb color was not affected by the treatment and staling rate was much lower for the thermoase-treated bread than for the control. | ( |
| 19 | Bread | Used rice as alternate flour | The coarse fraction after higher dough hydration (90–110%) improved volume and crumb texture was of rice bread. Slowly digestible starch (SDS) and resistant starch (RS) increased in the coarse flour breads. | ( |
| 20 | Bread | Different types of rice flour were used | The finest rice flours led to poorest retention of the gas produced during fermentation and produced breads with a lower specific volume in both formulations. Along with larger particles a consistent film was formed of water, hydrocolloid, and starch granules fragmented during milling and kneading as revealed from analysis of dough microstructure. | ( |
| 21 | Bread | commercial GF bread mixtures (coded GF1 and GF2) partially replaced with pseudocereals with supplementation of hydrocolloids | For improving the nutritional value of the final gluten-free breads without decreasing their technological quality a dehulled (DBF) and a puffed (PBF) buckwheat flour were used. Inclusions of 40% DBF improved the baking performances of the commercial gluten-free mixtures. Small amount of PBF, as well as of HPMC, resulted in softer gluten-free bread crumbs by reducing both the diffusion and the loss of water from the bread crumb and the interactions between starch and protein macromolecules, and finally reduced staling kinetics during storage. | ( |
| 22 | Bread | Rice flour and potato starch mixtures (1:1) with oat and quinoa malts were used | The incorporation of oat malt decreased batter viscosities of dough and density of bread with formation of more open crumb, but overdosing of oat malt resulted in excessive amylolysis during baking and deteriorated the product. Quinoa malt had no significant effect on the baking properties due to low α-amylase activity. | ( |
| 23 | Flat bread | Use of alternate flour supplemented with Xanthan gum | Rice flour:corn starch:potato starch in ratio of 40%:20%:40% followed by rice flour:corn starch:potato starch in ratio of 40%:40%:20% with 3% xanthan were the best formulations for production of gluten-free Egyptian balady flat bread. | ( |
| 24 | Bread | Corn starch and potato starch were used as main ingredients supplemented with inulin | Inulins with different degree of polymerization were used for the production of gluten-free bread and it was found that addition of inulin increased loaf volume and reduced crumb hardness. Inulin preparations with lower degree of polymerization had better effect on all analyzed parameters. | ( |
| 25 | Bread | Used unripe banana flour and potato starch with rice flour | Evaluated the feasibility of gluten-free bread making using unripe banana flour, a source of resistant starch and dietary fiber, as a starch-based ingredient. Promising results have been found for breads produced with 100% unripe banana flour and combinations involving rice flour and potato starch. | ( |
| 26 | Bread | Used rice flour treated with protease | It was found that rice bread swelling was remarkably improved with a longer period pre-fermenting using | ( |
| 27 | Cookies | Used alternate flours | Investigated rice flour, corn meal, sorghum flour, pearl millet flour, and ground nut meal substitutions in wheat flour, from 0 to 100% each, for the production of gluten-free cookies. Sensory evaluation revealed that the best levels of incorporation for cookie making were rice flour 50 percent, maize meal 50 percent, sorghum flour 50 percent, pearl millet 50 percent, and groundnut meal 20 percent. | ( |
| 28 | Muffins | Used plant protein | The incorporation of different protein isolates (kidney bean, field pea, and amaranth protein) enhanced batter viscoelasticity and resulted in muffins with higher specific volume, springiness, and cohesiveness as compared to wheat gluten. Kidney bean protein isolates resulted in firmer muffins compared to those made from field pea, amaranth, and wheat gluten protein. | ( |
| 29 | Bread | Used genetically modified wheat deleted for gliadins genes | Breads prepared with flour from low-gliadin wheat varieties (E82 and D793) showed breadmaking quality characteristics similar to those of normal wheat flour. | ( |
| 30 | Cookies | Used rice as alternate flour followed by incorporation of fibers | Different fibers (by replacing rice flour up to 20%), added individually or in combination, to improve the functional properties of gluten-free layer cakes. It was observed that gluten-free cakes containing blends of oat fiber-inulin resulted in improved specific volume and other desirable cake making properties. | ( |
| 31 | Muffins | Used rice as alternate flour and incorporated proteins (Soy protein isolate, pea protein isolate, egg white protein, and casein) | Compared the rice muffins produced by using five different protein sources: soy protein isolate, pea protein isolate, egg white protein, casein, and for comparing purposes vital wheat gluten (VWG). The egg white protein increased the height and specific volume whereas color of muffins was dominated by the color of the added proteins. The pea protein isolate containing muffins was the softest and springier than the No-Protein and casein gave the hardest muffin. In general, muffins with best visual appearance were those containing egg white protein or casein. | ( |
| 32 | Biscuits | Used alternate flours | The gluten-free biscuits were prepared using maize flour (MF), rice flour (RF), and soybean flour (SF) after supplementing other ingredients such as palm tree oil, honey, maize starch, eggs, sugar powdered, vanilla essence, and sodium bicarbonate. The blend with flour levels 30:30:40 (MF:RF:SF) led to the highest acceptability. | ( |
| 33 | Pasta | Used sorghum, rice, corn flours with incorporation of potato starch | Fifteen formulations (Sorghum/rice/potato) subjected for sensory analysis and seven formulations were selected in respect to taste and grittiness. Formulations IV (Sorghum/rice/potato/5:2.5:2.5), V (Sorghum/rice/potato/4:2:4), and VI (Sorghum/rice/potato/4:3:3) showed the best sensory results and were tested to chemical analysis and cooking evaluation. The spaghetti-type pasta, obtained in this study, that contained sorghum, rice, and potato flours (proportion of 40:20:40), was the sample that showed the best results in the cooking quality tests. This formulation showed the best density, yield, weight increase, and the lowest loss of solids. | ( |
| 34 | Cookies | Use of yellow corn, buckwheat and rice as alternate flour | Coarse-grained rice flour-based cookies had larger diameter, spread factor, darker color, and lower hardness but rest of the gluten-free cookies (yellow maize, buckwheat) had a lower spread ratio and greater hardness than wheat cookies. | ( |
| 35 | Breads | Used germinated brown rice | After 24 h of germination the brown rice flour-based bread had improved texture which might be ascribed to the increase of amylase activities as well as starch degradation resulting in hydration and pasting. However, excessive germination (beyond 24 h of germination) deteriorated the product as a result of extensive amylolysis. | ( |
| 36 | Cookies | Used pseudocereals of different stages of germination | Cookies from raw and germinated amaranth grain flour were prepared and it was reported that the use of germinated grain decreased fat but increased protein and fiber content. Pasting properties decreased but functional and antioxidant properties improved with germination. Raw amaranth flour cookies showed the highest spread ratio, followed by cookies prepared from germinated amaranth flour and wheat flour. | ( |
| 37 | Bread | Used pseudocereals followed by incorporation of sweetener | Bread prepared using amaranth, quinoa, and sweeteners (sucralose and sucralose-acesulfame) had almost similar specific volume, firmness and water activity to the control bread, but showed higher protein, lipid, and ash contents and a larger alveolar area. | ( |
| 38 | Muffins | Alternate flour incorporated with cow pea protein | Incorporation of white cow pea protein isolates (4–12 g/100 gm rice flour) decreased flour paste viscosities (peak, breakdown, and final) and increased batter viscoelasticity (above 8 g/100 g incorporation level). At above 8 g/100 g incorporation levels firmness, springiness, cohesiveness, and chewiness of the muffins increased for both white and red cow pea protein isolates. The white cow pea protein isolates increased muffin volume whereas red cow pea protein isolate decreased it. | ( |
| 39 | Muffins | Used rice flour blended with varying levels of jambolan fruit pulp (JFP) and xanthan gum (XG) | Blend of jambolan fruit pulp (JFP) and xanthan gum (XG) were used in preparation of rice flour-based gluten-free eggless muffins and it was observed that the incorporation of JFP and XG increased batter viscoelasticity. JFP incorporation increased greenness, cohesiveness, resilience, water activity (aw), total phenolic content, total flavonoid content, DPPH, and ABTS inhibition of the muffins. Further, XG improved muffin quality characteristics (appearance, specific volume, and resilience). | ( |
| 40 | Pasta | Used rice as alternate flour followed by incorporation of bean protein and fiber | Gluten-free spaghetti was prepared using rice flour and different concentrations of white-seeded low phytic acid and lectin-free bean flour (included at levels of 0, 20, and 40%, w/w). The gluten-free rice spaghetti reduced the total starch and the | ( |
| 41 | Bread and cake | Used sorghum as alternate flour followed by heat treatment | Heat treatment to sorghum flour at two different temperatures (95 and 125°C) for 15, 30, and 45 minutes was applied and it was observed that heat-treated cake and bread had better acceptability than the controls. Heating the flour at 125°C for 30 min produced bread with the highest specific volume (3.08 mL/g) and the most cells per slice area (50.38 cells/cm2). Cakes produced through this treatment had highest volume (72.17 cc) and most cells per slice area (79.18 cells/cm2). The control sorghum flour produced breads and cakes with low volume, poor crumb properties, and dense textures. | ( |
| 42 | Bread | Incorporated amino acid and sugar pairs | The gluten-free bread and wheat bread were analyzed using gas chromatography and it was observed that the gluten-free bread lacks key flavor-generating compounds pyrazine and 2-acetyl-1-pyrroline. Out of incorporating different amino acid and sugar pairs the case of the proline and glucose pair was best for retaining flavor of bread. | ( |
| 43 | Cakes | Used rice as alternate flour followed by incorporation of tapioca starch supplemented with resistant starch (a periodic and a functional dietary fiber) | Gluten-free cakes from rice flour and tapioca starch supplemented with resistant starch were investigated for physical and sensorial properties. With an increase in resistant starch level cakes, specific volume increased and was maximized at 15 g/100 g without affecting porosity values significantly. One cake batter was less elastic and thinner (viscosity decreased) with increased level of resistant starch concentration. Cake containing 20 g/100 g resistant starch was mostly preferred by panelists, although all cakes were acceptable. | ( |
| 44 | Cookies | Substitution of corn flour with soy flour | Soy flour at different levels, 5, 10, and 15% was incorporated to produce gluten-free bread and it was found that bread with 15% soy flour had the best physical, chemical, and sensory qualities. | ( |
| 45 | Muffins | Dietry fiber and Xanthan gum supplemented | Muffins prepared with 6% black carrot pomace dietary fiber concentrate and xanthan gum was reported to be most acceptable. | ( |
| 46 | Bread | Corn, rice cream soup and tapioca starch | Effects of the combination of chestnut flour (40%) and sourdough (20%) fermentation was investigated on chemical, technological, and nutritional attributes of gluten-free breads. Breads prepared with chestnut flour and/or sourdough had lower volume with increased hardness compared to the control, but the combination of chestnut flour and sourdough contributed to reduce crumb grain heterogeneity. Reduction of staling was observed only at 5 days, even if a decrease in amylopectin fusion enthalpy was observed. | ( |
| 47 | Cookies | Incorporation of Okara (by-product from soy milk production) along with commercial manioc flour | Different proportions of okara: 50; 30; 15; and 0% were used for developing gluten-free cookies and it was reported that incorporation of okara increased protein and fiber content. Overall acceptability increased significantly. | ( |
| 48 | Turkish dessert Revani | Corn flour, rice flour, potato flour, corn starch, and tapioca starch | Celiac patients cannot consume revani because semolina contains gluten. Gluten-free revani was made using corn flour, rice flour, potato flour, corn starch, and tapioca starch and the recipes were developed with soy protein, pea protein and transglutaminase (TG) enzyme. A blend of rice flour and corn starch or a blend of corn flour, potato flour, and corn starch provided more regular distribution of air bubbles in revani. The sensory properties of gluten-free revani, made using a blend of corn flour and rice flour, were not affected by source of the protein and TG. It was observed that a combination of 62.5% corn flour and 37.5% rice flour with soy protein and TG was most suitable in making gluten-free revani. | ( |
| 49 | Batter and Bread | Rice (50%), maize (30%) and quinoa flours with xanthan gum | Different levels of xanthan gum (1.5, 2.5, and 3.5%) and water (90, 100, and 110%) were added to a base formula of rice (50%), maize (30%), and quinoa flours (20%) during preparation of gluten-free batter and it was observed that more xanthan gum tended to produce batters of lower stickiness, adhesion, and cohesive-strength, yet of higher firmness, consistency, cohesiveness, and viscosity index. After baking, these loaves presented lower specific volume, lower crumb aw, pH, hardness, springiness, mean cell area, and void fraction; and higher ( | ( |
| 50 | Bread | Quinoa flour, transglutaminase (TGase), and proteolytic enzymes | Scanning Electron Microscopy revealed that the quinoa starch granules (0.4–2 μm) in presence of TGase induced significant changes in dough and baked samples' microstructures. The overall acceptability of the breads was improved by TGase addition. | ( |
| 51 | Cereal bar | quinoa, brown rice, flaxseed, dry fruits, and honey | The gluten-free cereal bars were developed for gluten-intolerant populations using dry raw materials (quinoa, brown rice, flaxseed, and dry fruits) and honey as a binding agent. Significant variation was observed physico-chemical and functional parameters of grains after dry heat treatment (80–100°C for 8–12 min) to grains (quinoa, brown rice, and flaxseed) prior to use in preparation of cereal bar. On the basis of sensory evaluation, a formulation with 50% honey level was found to be best. | ( |
| 52 | Pasta | Blue/white maize flour, chickpea, and unripe plantain | The composite pasta exhibited acceptable cooking loss (9–11%); pasta with blue maize showed lower hardness and chewiness, but higher adhesiveness with dark color than its white maize-based counterpart. The addition of 75% blue maize flour yielded the highest total phenolic content retention after extrusion (80%) and cooking (70%) was good for health benefits. | ( |
| 53 | Bread | Rice, tamarind gum | The batter properties and the quality of rice bread prepared using tamarind gum were equivalent or superior to those using other gums. The final viscosity after hydration of other gums and the pasting properties of rice flour with the tamarind gums were similar except for guar and xanthan gum. Cross-sections of rice bread showed that the addition of tamarind gum and pectin resulted in a fine appearance, but use of pectin was recommended due to its lower pH causing unpleasant sour taste and smell of the rice bread. | ( |
| 54 | Fish Patties | Rice, corn, amaranth, or quinoa | Water and gluten-free flours (rice, corn, amaranth, or quinoa) were added to improve cooking yield, texture parameters and as an aid in improving quality attributes such as taste and juiciness. Cooking yields of patties containing gluten-free flours were higher than control and maximum values ranged between 91 and 93%. Patties made with amaranth or quinoa flour had higher hardness whereas cohesiveness and springiness were higher in corn and rice flour based patties. Response surface methodology optimized patties formulations. | ( |
| 55 | chocolate cookies | rice flour and oligofructose-enriched inulin | Gluten-free chocolate cookies were characterized chemically, physically, and sensorially prepared with oligofructose-enriched inulin (25, 50, and 75%) as a partial substitute for rice flour. The chocolate cookie with 25% substitution of rice flour by inulin/oligofructose was as well accepted as the chocolate cookie with 100% rice flour (control) and the commercial cookie for most sensory properties. | ( |
| 56 | Bread | Rice semolina, field beans with gums | The rice semolina supplemented with field bean semolina was used for formulation of gluten-free bread and for improving its final quality, choice of six factors: agar–agar, water, two types of gums (gum arabic and locust bean gum), and two types of starches (tapioca starch and corn starch) were incorporated. The results showed that specific volume of gluten-free breads increased significantly ( | ( |
| 57 | Biscuits | Foxtail millet and amaranth | Copra meal (15%) with germinated foxtail millet (85%) flour premixed and blended with amaranth in 60:40 proportions formulated gluten-free, calorie deficient composite biscuits. Successful calorie reduced in fat and binary (fat and sugar) amended biscuits had lower calorie (364.58 and 315.97 kcal/g, respectively) as compared with control (471.01 kcal/g). | ( |
| 58 | Bread | Banana starch with maize starch and rice flour | The role of native and extruded banana starch, and a 1:1 native:extruded mixed banana starch composite (MB) was investigated in slowing down the starch digestibility of bread crumb and crust. It revealed a slowly digestible starch (SDS) increase from 1.09% (control) to 4.2, 6.6, and 7.76% in native, mixed, and extruded banana crumbs (fully gelatinized), respectively. A molecular size reduction resulted in highly gelatinized baked products rich in structurally driven SDS. | ( |
| 59 | Bread | 5–15% Egg white powder substituted gluten-free flour | Breads with egg white powder had larger specific volumes and more homogeneous texture than control gluten-free flours made breads. Adding egg white powder increased the elasticity of gluten-free batter and improved the texture properties of resultant bread during storage. The M200 egg white powder with more water-soluble protein aggregates yielded a more significant improvement in bread quality than general standardization sample P110. | ( |
| 60 | Biscuits | Gluten-free flours, dough and biscuits | Addition of both fermented and unfermented | ( |
| 61 | Cake | Potato starch, Corn starch, Broccoli leaf powder | New gluten-free mini sponge cakes fortified with broccoli leaves was developed. Broccoli leaf powder was a good source of nutritional components, including proteins and minerals, as well as bioactive compounds such as glucosinolates and phenolics. The antioxidant capacity of gluten-free mini sponge cakes significantly increased after incorporation of broccoli leaf powder. The addition of 2.5% broccoli leaf powder as a starch substitute resulted in an optimal improvement in the nutraceutical potential of gluten-free cakes without compromising their sensory quality. | ( |