1. Influence of Canahua and Quinoa Wholemeals on Properties of Non-Fermented Wheat Dough
- Author
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Marie Hrušková, R. Kapačinskaité, T. Hofmanová, Ivan Švec, and De Gruyter (Walter de Gruyter GmbH)
- Subjects
0303 health sciences ,extensibility ,030309 nutrition & dietetics ,Ecology (disciplines) ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Agriculture ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Biology ,040401 food science ,03 medical and health sciences ,0404 agricultural biotechnology ,Plant science ,Fermentation ,chenopodium species ,rheology ,Food science ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,composite flour - Abstract
The study compares the influence of wheat flour replacement by 10 or 20 wt% of quinoa and canahua wholemeals on wheat dough technological quality and rheological properties. The technological quality of wheat flour was affected in terms of protein quality and amylases activity, associated with a high dietary fibre content of both tested non-traditional materials. A farinograph test revealed that quinoa partially increased water absorption; a higher amount of water resulted in the shortened stability of dough consistency during mixing and its weakened cohesiveness at the end of the test. The effect of canahua was unequivocal – water absorption decreased, stability was prolonged properly, but dough softening increased. An extensigraph test confirmed a positive effect of alternative crops on dough elasticity, but in general, the composite dough with 20% of canahua or quinoa showed worsened machinability. Multivariate statistical methods proved a stronger effect when quinoa was analysed solely than when added at complete samples a set, while for canahua-wheat samples the result was opposite.
- Published
- 2019