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Characteristics of French Bread Baked from Wheat Flours of Reduced Starch Amylose Content

September 2007 Volume 84 Number 5
Pages 437 — 442
C. S. Park1 and B.-K. Baik2,3

Division of Winter Cereal and Upland Crops, Honan Agricultural Research Institute, National Institute of Crop Science, Rural Development Administration, Iksan 570-080, Korea. Assistant professor, Department of Crop & Soil Science, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-6376. Corresponding author. Phone: 509-335-8230. Fax: 509-335-4815. E-mail address: bbaik@wsu.edu


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Accepted May 10, 2007.
ABSTRACT

Wheat genotypes of wild type, partial waxy, and waxy starch were used to determine the influence of starch amylose content on French bread making quality of wheat flour. Starch amylose content and protein content of flours were 25.0–25.4% and 14.3–16.9% for wild type; 21.2 and 14.9% for single null partial waxy; 15.4–17.1% and 13.2–17.6% for double null partial waxy; and 1.8 and 19.3% for waxy starch, respectively. Wheat flours of double null partial waxy starch produced smaller or comparable loaf volume of bread than wheat flours of wild type and single null partial waxy starch. Waxy wheat flour, despite its high protein content, generally produced smaller volume of bread with highly porous, glutinous, and weak crumb than wheat flours of wild type and partial waxy starch. French bread baked from a flour of double null partial waxy starch using the sponge-and-dough method maintained greater crumb moisture content for 24 hr and softer crumb texture for 48 hr of storage compared with bread baked from a flour of wild type starch. In French bread baked using the straight-dough method, double null partial waxy wheat flours with protein content >14.3% exhibited comparable or greater moisture content of bread crumb during 48 hr of storage than wheat flours of wild type starch. While the crumb firmness of bread stored for 48 hr was >11.4 N in wheat flours of wild type starch, it was <10.6 N in single or double null partial waxy flours. Wheat flours of reduced starch amylose content could be desirable for production of French bread with better retained crumb moisture and softness during storage.



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