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Significance of Dietary Fiber on the Viscometric Pattern of Pasted and Gelled Flour-Fiber Blends

July 2006 Volume 83 Number 4
Pages 370 — 376
C. Collar , 1 , 2 E. Santos , 1 and C. M. Rosell 1

Cereal Group, Department of Food Science, Instituto de Agroquímica y Tecnología de Alimentos (CSIC), Polígono La Coma S/N, 46980 Paterna (Spain). Corresponding author. Phone: 34 963 90 00 22. Fax 34 963 63 63 01. E-mail: ccollar@iata.csic.es


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Accepted May 3, 2006.
ABSTRACT

The aim of this research was to optimize mixtures of fibers from different sources and degree of processing meeting acceptable dough viscometric standards to design low-calorie wheat bread formulations. Effects of soluble (inuline [FN]), partially soluble (sugar beet [FX]), pea cell wall (SW), and insoluble (pea hull [EX]) dietary fibers on wheat dough pasting and gelling profiles have been investigated. Impact of fibers added singly and in associated mixtures at different levels on the investigated viscometric parameters retrieved from a Rapid Visco Analyser curve has been assessed by response surface methodology, and the thermal parameters derived from the cooking and cooling functional profile were correlated. Flour replacement up to 34% by fibers significantly provided a deleterious effect on pasting and gelling viscosity profiles of the resulting hydrated high fiber-flour blends. The magnitude of the reduction in dough viscometric characteristics during gelatinization, pasting, and setback closely depended on the nature of the fibers in the blend and on the extent of the flour substitution. A delayed and restricted swelling of starch granules and amylose leaching process preferentially achieved by the pair FN-FX resulted in higher pasting temperatures and reduced peak viscosities during cooking and a sharp decrease of the setback on cooling. Single addition of FX, FN, and EX, respectively, provided a significant decrease in both breakdown viscosity and viscosity at the end of 95°C. Simultaneous presence of FN and EX that exhibit medium or low hydration properties allowed a partial restoration of initial breakdown viscosity and a simultaneous decrease in holding strength. Caution should be paid to the pairs FN-FX and EX-SW because of the adverse extra decline they induced in the viscosities of both hot paste and cold gel.



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