| Literature DB >> 32316319 |
Abstract
Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) is a well-known drought and climate resistant crop with vast food use for the inhabitants of Africa and other developing countries. The importance of this crop is well reflected in its embedded benefits and use as a staple food, with fermentation playing a significant role in transforming this crop into an edible form. Although the majority of these fermented food products evolve from ethnic groups and rural communities, industrialization and the application of improved food processing techniques have led to the commercial success and viability of derived products. While some of these sorghum-based fermented food products still continue to bask in this success, much more still needs to be done to further explore evolving techniques, technologies and processes. The addition of other affordable nutrient sources in sorghum-based fermented foods is equally important, as this will effectively augment the intake of a nutritionally balanced product.Entities:
Keywords: 4th industrial revolution (4IR); fermentation; fermented products; food security; lactic acid bacteria; sorghum
Year: 2020 PMID: 32316319 PMCID: PMC7231209 DOI: 10.3390/nu12041111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Mature panicles of different types of sorghum in the field. Black (left), white (middle), and red (right) sorghum (Adapted from Awika [27]).
Proximate composition of sorghum.
| Proximate composition (%) | Jones and Beckwith [ | Okoh et al. [ | Adebiyi et al. [ | Shawrang et al. [ | Shargie [ | Udachan et al. [ | Awadelkareem et al. [ | Ndimba et al. [ | Singh et al. [ | Ape et al. [ | Jimoh and Abdullahi [ | Mohapatra et al. [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1.2–1.3 | 0.90–1.52 | 1.98 | 4.20 | 1.44 | 0.92–1.75 | 1.28–1.78 | 1.61–2.03 | 1.90 | 2.07 | 1.12–1.68 | 3.17 |
|
| NR | 71.80–85.20 | 72.41 | NR | NR | 70.65–76.20 | 72.44–77.28 | NR | NR | 76.51 | 65.15–76.28 | 71.95 |
|
| 3.1–3.4 | 1.38–4.50 | 3.35 | 6.9 | 3.32 | 2.30–2.80 | 2.84–3.02 | 2.37–2.75 | 3.30 | 3.10 | 5.12–10.54 | 4.70 |
|
| 1.8–1.9 | 1.47–2.45 | 2.25 | 19.5 | 1.83 | 1.40–2.70 | 1.72–2.02 | NR | 1.7 | 2.86 | 1.65–7.94 | 2.76 |
|
| NR | NR | 10.66 | 8.1–8.5 | NR | 8.10–9.99 | 6.67–7.29 | 8.95–11.16 | 9.80 | 6.36 | 1.39–19.02 | 6.07 |
|
| 11.5–11.7 | 9.28–14.86 | 9.35 | 11.80 | 9.95 | 8.90–11.02 | 10.21–13.45 | 11.90–12.82 | 12.5 | 9.10 | 6.23–13.81 | 11.36 |
CHO – carbohydrate; NR – not reported. Values are expressed in dry matter.
Amino acid composition (g/100 g) of sorghum.
| Reference | Ala | Arg | Asp | Cys | Glu | Gly | His | Ile | Leu | Lys | Met | Phe | Pro | Ser | Thr | Trp | Tyr | Val |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Awadelkareem et al. [ | 8.69–8.70 | 2.79–3.61 | 4.83–5.28 | NR | 17.50–19.57 | 2.36–3.08 | 1.75–1.77 | 3.61–3.72 | 12.48–13.48 | 1.57–2.31 | 1.55–1.88 | 4.73–5.10 | 7.70–8.16 | 3.77–3.85 | 2.48–2.64 | NR | 3.72–3.75 | 4.65–4.74 |
| Khalil et al. [ | 9.0–9.2 | 3.3 | 6.5–6.8 | 1.2 | 21.6–22 | 3.0 | 1.7–1.8 | 4.0–4.1 | 13.6–13.8 | 2.5–2.6 | 1.3–1.4 | 5.1–5.2 | 9.4–10.7 | 4.3–4.4 | 3.2 | 0.9 | 2.9–3.0 | 4.8–4.9 |
| Salunkhe et al. [ | 7.34–9.62 | 3.20–4.68 | 4.98–6.66 | 1.94–3.06 | 23.42–28.12 | 3.12–4.12 | 1.46–2.46 | 3.92–4.86 | 12.02–14.48 | 1.42–2.72 | 1.36–2.34 | 4.03–5.62 | 8.92–12.34 | 3.92–5.66 | 1.92–2.42 | 0.49–1.16 | 2.12–3.62 | 5.12–6.86 |
| Afify et al. [ | 7.43–8.83 | 3.58–4.01 | 6.24–7.06 | 1.69–2.11 | 18.45–20.63 | 2.84–3.05 | 1.93–2.17 | 3.49–3.85 | 11.74–13.56 | 2.11–2.26 | 2.73–2.94 | 4.40–4.98 | 6.66–8.99 | 3.49–4.17 | 2.75–3.21 | NR | 4.22–4.33 | 4.22–4.82 |
Ala – alanine; Arg – arginine; Asp – Aspartic acid; Cys – cysteine; Glu – glutamic acid; Gly – glycine; His – histidine; Ile – isoleucine; Leu – leucine; Lys – lysine; Met – methionine; Phe – phenylalanine; Pro – proline; Ser – serine; Thr- threonine; Trp – tryptophan; Tyr – tyrosine; Val – valine. d.b – dry basis; NR – not reported. Values are expressed in dry matter.
Mineral composition (mg/kg, d.b) of sorghum.
| Reference | Ca | Cd | Co | Cr | Cu | Fe | I | K | Mg | Mn | Na | Ni | P | Pb | Se | Zn |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mabelele et al. [ | 100.1–121.3 | NR | NR | NR | 1.9–2.4 | 24.3–40.3 | ND | 2751–3524 | 1130–1440 | 14.2–20.2 | 20–40 | NR | 2210–3327 | NR | NR | 16.2–24.2 |
| Shegro et al. [ | 204.50–447.50 | NR | NR | NR | NR | 41.17–127.50 | NR | 1150–2568.75 | NR | 9.5–23.83 | 11.5–54.38 | NR | 1498–3787.25 | NR | NR | 13.5–34.67 |
| Pontieri et al. [ | 233.84–411.83 | 9.92–60.54 | 7.12–15.24 | 121.59–254.18 | NR | 39.36–77.03 | 14.81–212.70 | 3434.46–6957.67 | 1454.92–2862.00 | 8.93–19.44 | 455.09–840.69 | 0.46–1.27 | 2148.60–2963.40 | 92.62–303.89 | 2.98–14.13 | 21.10–47.05 |
| Gerrano et al. [ | 44.57–477.04 | NR | NR | NR | NR | 13.50–55.13 | NR | 900–3366 | 854–1631.17 | 11.17–20.17 | 12.50–62.03 | NR | 2042.19–3775 | NR | NR | 12–44.83 |
Ca – calcium; Cd – cadmium; Co – cobalt; Cr – chromium; Cu – copper; Fe – iron; I – iodine; K – potassium; Mg – magnesium; Mn – manganese; Na – sodium; Ni – nickel; P – phosphorus; Pb – lead; Se – selenium; Zn – zinc. NR – not reported. Values are expressed in dry matter.
Vitamin composition (mg/100 g) of sorghum.
| Vitamins | Khalil et al. [ | Serna-Saldivar and Espinosa-Ramirez [ | Kulamarva et al. [ | Ochanda et al. [ | Saleh et al. [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.69–0.73 | 0.45 | NR | 0.34–0.35 | 0.38 |
|
| 0.12–0.14 | 0.16 | 0.13 | 0.15–0.16 | 0.15 |
|
| 2.99–3.01 | 4.88 | 4.5 | 4.20–4.55 | 4.3 |
|
| 1.55–1.63 | NR | NR | NR | NR |
|
| 0.40–0.43 | 0.59 | 0.47 | 0.17–0.35 | NR |
|
| 0.02 | 0.02 | NR | 0.02 | NR |
B1 – thiamin; B2 – riboflavin; B3 – niacin; B5 – pantothenic acid; B6 – pyridoxin; B9 – folic acid. Values are expressed in dry matter.
Some African sorghum-based fermented food products and microorganisms associated with them.
| Product Name | Country/Region | Product Use | Microorganism Identified | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Sudan | Porridge | Unknown | Eggum et al. [ |
|
| West Africa | Alcoholic beverage | Kolawole et al. [ | |
|
| Uganda | Beverage | Marsh et al. [ | |
|
| Zimbabwe | Alcoholic beverage | Togo et al. [ | |
|
| Burkina Faso/Togo | Alcoholic beverage | Van der Aa Kühle et al. [ | |
|
| Uganda | Alcoholic beverage | Mukisa et al. [ | |
|
| Benin | Porridge | Adinsi et al. [ | |
|
| Sudan | Gruel | Adams [ | |
|
| Sudan | Porridge | Mwale [ | |
|
| Rwanda | Alcoholic beverage | Lyumugabe et al. [ | |
|
| Ethiopia | Sourdough/bread | Dandessa et al. [ | |
|
| Sudan | Pancake, flat bread, sourdough | Mohammed et al. [ | |
|
| Sudan | Bread | Gassem [ | |
|
| Nigeria | Beverage, breakfast meal | Franz & Holzapfel [ | |
|
| South Africa | Porridge gruel | Franz & Holzapfel [ | |
|
| Tanzania | Beverage | Odunfa & Oyewole [ | |
|
| Sudan | Alcoholic drink | Dirar [ | |
|
| Sudan | Infant food | Graham et al. [ | |
|
| West Africa | Gruel | Graham et al. [ | |
|
| Nigeria | Porridge | Adebayo-Tayo & Needum [ | |
|
| Tanzania | Alcoholic beverage | LABs, yeasts | Shayo et al. [ |
|
| Nigeria | Alcoholic beverage | Oriola et al. [ | |
|
| Nigeria | Alcoholic beverage | Kolawole et al. [ | |
|
| Ethiopia | Beverage | Lemi [ | |
|
| Ivory Coast | Alcoholic beverage | Djè et al. [ | |
|
| Benin | Alcoholic beverage |
| Kayodé et al. [ |
|
| Botswana, South Africa | Porridge | Madoroba et al. [ | |
|
| Malawi | Alcoholic beverage | Unknown | Nyanzi & Jooste [ |
|
| East Africa | Porridge | Blandino et al. [ | |
|
| Southern Africa | Beverage | Katongole [ | |
| Weaning food | Nigeria | Weaning food | Wakil & Kazeem [ |
Figure 2Modifications to sorghum during fermentation.
Some recorded cases of pathogens in African fermented sorghum-based foods.
| Food | Safety risk | Probable Source | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fermented sorghum meal | Food pathogens | Kunene et al. [ | |
|
| Hygienic risk, antimicrobial resistances, biogenic amines, presence of virulence determinants |
| Yousif et al. [ |
|
| Cyanogenic compounds, food pathogens, mycotoxins | Adinsi et al. [ | |
|
| Food pathogens |
| Lyumugabe et al. [ |
|
| Food pathogens |
| Simango and Rukure [ |
|
| Food pathogens |
| Byakika et al. [ |
|
| Mycotoxins | Mycotoxigenic fungi | Adekoya et al. [ |
|
| Mycotoxins | Mycotoxigenic fungi | Ezekiel et al. [ |
|
| Mycotoxins | Mycotoxigenic fungi | Matumba et al. [ |
|
| Mycotoxins | Mycotoxigenic fungi | Adebo et al. [ |