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Lipids in Japanese Noodle Flours1

November 1998 Volume 75 Number 6
Pages 826 — 829
W. J. Jun , 2 O. K. Chung , 2 , 3 and P. A. Seib 2 , 4

Cooperative investigations, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service and the Department of Grain Science and Industry, Kansas State University. Contribution No. 98-320-J from the Kansas State Agricultural Experimental Station, Manhattan, KS 66506. Names are necessary to report factually on available data; however, the USDA neither guarantees nor warrants the standard of the product, and the use of the name by the USDA implies no approval of the product to the exclusion of others that may also be suitable. Graduate research assistant and professors, respectively. Department of Grain Science and Industry, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506. Supervisory research chemist, USDA/ARS, Grain Marketing and Production Research Center, Manhattan, KS 66502. Corresponding author.


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Accepted August 20, 1998.
ABSTRACT

Lipids in Japanese salt and alkaline noodle flours and in Australian soft white wheat (SWW) flours were extracted and compared. Nonstarch lipid (NSL) and free lipid (FL) levels ranges were 1.33–1.71% and 0.84–1.04%, respectively, for nine Japanese salt noodle flours compared to 1.43–1.50% and 0.97–1.00% for three Australian SWW flours used mainly to prepare salt noodle. The six Japanese alkaline noodle flours averaged ≈15% less NSL and 20% less FL than the Australian flours. The NSL was separated by column chromatography into nonpolar lipid (NL), glycolipid (GL), and phospholipid (PL) fractions. The NSL extracted from salt noodle and Australian flours contained ≈36% more NL than that from alkaline noodle flour. The composition of NSL was similar for salt noodle and Australian SWW flours but was different for alkaline noodle flour. Japanese salt noodle flour could be differentiated from alkaline noodle flour by the higher levels of NSL and FL, although those elevated levels may be caused in part to the somewhat higher extraction rate for the salt-noodle flours. However, two parameters independent of extraction rate, the ratios of NL/PL and NL/ash were 47 and 15% higher, respectively, in the salt vs. alkaline noodle flours.



This article is in the public domain and not copyrightable. It may be freely reprinted with customary crediting of the source. American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc., 1998.