sourdough bread
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2022 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 127
Author(s):  
Kamalrookh Z. Marolia ◽  
Bushra K. Khan ◽  
Namrata Raval ◽  
Yash Sharma
Keyword(s):  

Fermentation ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 32
Author(s):  
Ayoyinka O. Olojede ◽  
Abiodun I. Sanni ◽  
Kolawole Banwo ◽  
Towobola Michael

Enriched gluten-free products are in high demand owing to increasing celiac disease worldwide. Sourdough fermentation can improve the quality of gluten-free cereals, rendering the resulting product beneficial as a functional food. This study produced sorghum bread (SB) using sourdough technology and evaluated the texture, nutrition profile, bioactive components, and sensory attributes of the product. The base formula was composed of sorghum flour and corn starch. Sourdough made with Pediococcus pentosaceus LD7 (PL7), P. pentosaceus SA8 (PS8), or Weissella confusa SD8 (WS8) was added at a 20% substitution level for bread production, while bread without sourdough addition was used as the control sample. The texture profiles of the SB were significantly (p ˂ 0.05) softer than that of the control. The sourdough breads possessed higher crude protein, ash, and dietary fibre contents than the control bread. Tannin and total phenol contents were significantly (p ˂ 0.05) higher in the sourdough breads compared to the control sample. The specific volume of the sample made with PS8 sourdough was the highest at 2.50 cm3/g compared to the other samples (2.17–2.46 cm3/g). The sourdough samples had higher scores for taste, texture, aroma, and overall acceptability than the control, with PL7 SB exhibiting the best overall acceptability (6.56). This study established promising use of sourdough with starters as an ingredient for baked products with improved technological and nutritional attributes as well as consumer acceptability.


Author(s):  
Alessio Da Ros ◽  
Andrea Polo ◽  
Carlo Giuseppe Rizzello ◽  
Marta Acin-Albiac ◽  
Marco Montemurro ◽  
...  

Knowledge on environmental factors, which may compose the gut microbiota, and drive the host physiology and health is of paramount importance. Human dietary habits and food compositions are pivotal drivers to assembly the human gut microbiota, but, inevitably, unmapped for many diet components, which are poorly investigated individually.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 2008
Author(s):  
Larisa Rebeca Șerban ◽  
Adriana Păucean ◽  
Simona Maria Man ◽  
Maria Simona Chiş ◽  
Vlad Mureşan

In recent years, the attention of farmers, bakers and consumers towards ancient wheat species has been increasing. Low demands of pedo-climatic growth factors, the suitability for organic cultivation along with their high nutritional quality and their content in pro-health compounds make them extremely attractive for bakers and modern consumers, equally. On the other hand, in recent years, sourdough has gained attention due to its ability to produce new functionally active molecules with higher bioaccessibility and thus to produce bread with enhanced nutritional quality. This paper highlights the relevant nutritional profile of einkorn, spelt, emmer and Khorasan which could lead to bread with improved textural, sensorial, microbial and nutritional characteristics through sourdough fermentation. The ancient wheat species could be used as promising substitutes for common wheat flour for the design of innovative types of bread, even for special needs.


Author(s):  
Özlem Çağındı ◽  
Ergun Köse ◽  
Ceren İnce

Sourdough bread is a traditional product, which is produced by mixing wheat, rye or other grain flours with water and lactic acid fermentation. The supposed mechanisms for the effect of foods produced by sourdough fermentation on health were probiotic effect of microorganisms, production of bioactive peptides and organic acids (acetic acid, butyrate, propionic acid), decreased amount of anti-nutrients (phytic acid, etc.), digestibility of starch and protein, increased bioaccessibility of phenolic compounds and bioavailability of minerals, degradation of gluten, new product to celiac patients. It was reported to have effects on nutrition, such as product development. In this review, the effect of sourdough fermentation on the ingredients in bread, in vitro bioaccessibility and health benefits are examined.


Foods ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 2227
Author(s):  
Angela Mariela González-Montemayor ◽  
José Fernando Solanilla-Duque ◽  
Adriana C. Flores-Gallegos ◽  
Claudia Magdalena López-Badillo ◽  
Juan Alberto Ascacio-Valdés ◽  
...  

In this study, proximal composition, mineral analysis, polyphenolic compounds identification, and antioxidant and functional activities were determined in green bean (GBF), mesquite (MF), and pea (PF) flours. Different mixtures of legume flour and wheat flour for bread elaboration were determined by a simplex-centroid design. After that, the proximal composition, color, specific volume, polyphenol content, antioxidant activities, and functional properties of the different breads were evaluated. While GBF and PF have a higher protein content (41–47%), MF has a significant fiber content (19.9%) as well as a higher polyphenol content (474.77 mg GAE/g) and antioxidant capacities. It was possible to identify Ca, K, and Mg and caffeic and enolic acids in the flours. The legume–wheat mixtures affected the fiber, protein content, and the physical properties of bread. Bread with MF contained more fiber; meanwhile, PF and GBF benefit the protein content. With MF, the specific bread volume only decreased by 7%. These legume flours have the potential to increase the nutritional value of bakery goods.


2021 ◽  
pp. 263497952110427
Author(s):  
Anna Harris

How to render sensory memory? In this article, I speculate on the possibilities of textural methods which attend closely to textile forms, specifically embroidery, as a way to explore this enduring question in multimodal research. To open up concerns about bodily relations between humans, as well as the more-than-human bodies we share worlds with, this article focuses on sensory memory fragments of encounters with the microbial conglomerations of sourdough bread starter. I offer three bubbling, sour-sweet texts: 1) an archived auto-ethnographic account of learning how to make a sourdough starter; 2) a social-media inspired piece on the sticky home archives of quarantine; and 3) a future speculative citizen science project. These fragments co-exist with microbes I have embroidered on ancient linens. From the tangy strings of sourdough histories, and the tangled threads in cloth I draw concrete methodological suggestions for new directions in textural research projects, such as material fieldnotes and crafted data. In doing so, I join other authors in this special issue in the call for multimodal forms of ethnographic storytelling about sensory memory, in this case one that attends not only to messy entanglements with bodies but also their textural, material, layered histories extending into the depth of their surfaces.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (18) ◽  
pp. 5658
Author(s):  
Hung-Yueh Chen ◽  
Chang-Wei Hsieh ◽  
Pin-Cheng Chen ◽  
Shin-Pin Lin ◽  
Ya-Fen Lin ◽  
...  

This study developed a nutritionally valuable product with bioactive activity that improves the quality of bread. Djulis (Chenopodium formosanum), a native plant of Taiwan, was fermented using 23 different lactic acid bacteria strains. Lactobacillus casei BCRC10697 was identified as the ideal strain for fermentation, as it lowered the pH value of samples to 4.6 and demonstrated proteolysis ability 1.88 times higher than controls after 24 h of fermentation. Response surface methodology was adopted to optimize the djulis fermentation conditions for trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity (TEAC). The optimal conditions were a temperature of 33.5 °C, fructose content of 7.7%, and dough yield of 332.8, which yielded a TEAC at 6.82 mmol/kg. A 63% increase in TEAC and 20% increase in DPPH were observed when compared with unfermented djulis. Subsequently, the fermented djulis was used in different proportions as a substitute for wheat flour to make bread. The total phenolic and flavonoid compounds were 4.23 mg GAE/g and 3.46 mg QE/g, marking respective increases of 18% and 40% when the djulis was added. Texture analysis revealed that adding djulis increased the hardness and chewiness of sourdough breads. It also extended their shelf life by approximately 2 days. Thus, adding djulis to sourdough can enhance the functionality of breads and may provide a potential basis for developing djulis-based functional food.


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