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1.
Reduced glutathione (GSH), released from lysed yeast cells, is well-known for weakening dough structure. However, its influence on bread texture and staling has not yet been completely elucidated. Herein, this study aims at assessing the effects of GSH on dough properties and bread quality, especially bread staling, using Rheofermentometer analysis, texture profile analysis (TPA), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and low-field nuclear magnetic resonance (LF-NMR). The results revealed that GSH substantially decreased the dough height and gas-retention capacity during fermentation. The weakened dough structure was attributed to GSH-induced disulfide bond cleavage in gluten proteins and the depolymerization of glutenin polymers. The addition of 0.005%–0.01% GSH resulted in acceptable bread quality. However, bread supplemented with 0.015%–0.03% of GSH exhibited a coarser and more open crumb microstructure, as well as high level of hardness and low resilience during aging. GSH promoted crumb water loss and drove the water shift from the immobilized to the bound state. The DSC and XRD analyses further confirmed that GSH promoted starch retrogradation and recrystallization. These results suggest that apart from the gluten structure, GSH also altered gluten−starch interactions and water redistribution, ultimately decreasing bread quality and accelerating bread staling.  相似文献   

2.
The crystallinity of starch in crispy bread crust was quantified using several different techniques. Confocal scanning laser microscopy (CSLM) demonstrated the presence of granular starch in the crust and remnants of granules when moving towards the crumb. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) showed an endothermic transition at 70 °C associated with the melting of crystalline amylopectin. The relative starch crystallinity, as determined by X-ray and DSC, from different types of breads was found to lie between 36% and 41% (X-ray) and between 32% and 43% (DSC) for fresh bread crust. Storage of breads in a closed box (22 °C) for up to 20 days showed an increase in crust crystallinity due to amylopectin retrogradation both by X-ray and DSC. However, DSC thermograms of 1-day old bread crust showed no amylopectin retrogradation and after 2 days storage, amylopectin retrogradation in the crust was hardly detectable. 13C CP MAS NMR was used to characterize the physical state of starch in flour and bread crumb and crust. The intensity of the peaks showed a dependence on the degree of starch gelatinization.  相似文献   

3.
Physico-chemical properties of bread baked by partially replacing normal wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) flour (15, 30, and 45%) with two hard waxy wheat flours were investigated. Substitution with waxy wheat flour resulted in higher loaf volume and softer loaves. However, substitution at >30% resulted in excessive post-bake shrinkage and a ‘key-hole’ shape with an open crumb structure. Bread crumb microstructure indicated a loss of starch granule rigidity and fusing of starch granules. The cells in the interior of the bread did not become gas-continuous and as a result, shrunk as the loaf cooled. Soluble starch content was significantly higher in bread crumb containing waxy wheat flour than in control bread. Debranching studies indicated that the soluble starch in bread made with 30-45% hard waxy wheat flour was mostly amylopectin. Incorporation of waxy wheat flour resulted in softer bread immediately after baking but did not retard staling upon storage.  相似文献   

4.
Bread staling involves a combination of physico-chemical phenomena that leads to a reduction of quality. This study aims at evaluating the impact of baking conditions (280 °C, 8 min; 310 °C, 5.5 min; 340 °C, 4 min), baking type (of fully baked (FB) and part-baked (PB)) and storage temperature (−18, 4 and 20 °C) on the staling of Sangak bread. Results showed that lower baking temperature with longer baking time produced drier bread with higher firmness. In FB Sangak breads, amylopectin retrogradation, amount of unfreezable water and firmness (measured by compression test) increased during storage at positive temperatures but hardness (determined by Kramer shear test) decreased significantly during first day of storage. The recrystallized amylopectin traps the free water resulting in crumb hardening. Water is also absorbed by the dry crust resulting in changes of rheological properties in the crust and crumb, and finally in staling. Storage at 4 °C resulted in increasing melting enthalpy of amylopectin crystallite in comparison with storage at 20 °C. Also it was found that firmness of PB breads due to rebaking was significantly lower than FB breads. There were no significant changes in staling parameters of FB and PB stored at −18 °C.  相似文献   

5.
Breads were chilled at room temperature or using a vacuum chilling process. The staling rate was studied after partial baking and after the final baking. Vacuum chilled breads (VCBs) exhibited a higher moisture loss than conventionally chilled bread (CCB). A higher enthalpy of melting of amylopectin crystals was observed for VCB in comparison to CCB.VCB had a negative effect on the texture of the bread. The hardness of the crumb of VCB was increased by 20% at the end of staling and the kinetics of staling was 10% faster for VCB in comparison to CCB. After 12 days of storage at 4 °C, a second and final baking was applied to the bread. The staling rate of VCB was almost two times that of CCB. The staling rate of CCB was unchanged in comparison to the staling rate after partial baking. Data on the enthalpy of melting of amylopectin showed that the same amount of amylopectin was formed at the end of staling for CCB after part baked process and after full baking process. Beside, the VCB showed a higher amount of recrystallized amylopectin (10%) at the end of the staling which followed the partial baking.  相似文献   

6.
The role of the gluten network in the crispness of bread crust   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:1  
Crispness features of baked products strongly determine consumer acceptability. For many baked products, such as bread, the outer crust gives the crispy sensation. Confocal scanning laser microscopy of the structure of bread crust revealed a continuous protein phase and a discontinuous non-gelatinized starch phase in the outer crust. In contrast, the crumb and inner crust, showed a gelatinized starch network associated with a protein network. The role of the protein phase of the outer crust in determining crispness has been studied. During storage, the crispness of bread crust alters as a result of changes in water content/activity resulting from moisture redistribution within the bread and between the bread and its environment. Water content was affected by the flour protein content and by selectively modifying the crust protein phase of a model bread with enzymes, as well as by storing breads at high and low relative humidity (80–40% RH). Protease modification resulted in a lower water content and activity in the crust during the first hours of storage. In contrast, modification by transglutaminase had the opposite effect and gave rise to higher water retention of the crust compared to the un-treated d bread. This shows that modification of the protein network can be used to regulate the water holding capacity of the crust. Sensory analysis confirmed the retention of crispness in protease modified bread crust after 2 h storage at 80% RH conditions, whereas both the untreated and transglutaminase-treated breads lost their crispness. A negative relationship between water activity/content and crispness was found. Modification of the starch phase of the crust by alpha-amylase produced a bread crust with a low water activity. However, a steep increase in the water activity was observed after 2 h storage at 80% RH with a concomitant loss of crispness. These results indicate an important role of the gluten network in determining crust properties.  相似文献   

7.
This paper presents a study on the impact of baking conditions on crumb staling. Breads were baked at 220 °C, 200 °C and 180 °C corresponding to 6, 8 and 10 min to rise the temperature to 98 °C in the crumb (heating rates 13, 9.8 and 7.8 °C/min respectively with an initial temperature of 20 °C). A new protocol has been developed, consisting in baking a slab of degassed dough in a miniaturized oven to mimic the baking conditions of conventional bread making. Texture tests were done during staling on degassed crumb and on conventional crumb. Calorimetry tests showed that during storage, amylopectin recrystallisation occurred before crumb stiffening. A first order kinetics model was used to fit the evolution of the crumb texture (Young's modulus) and of the recrystallisation of amylopectin. The results showed that the hardening of the crumb during staling occurred after retrogradation of amylopectin. In addition, the staling rate was faster for faster baking kinetics. A mechanical model showed that the relative Young modulus is proportional to the square of the relative density of the crumb.  相似文献   

8.
The wide prevalence of gluten-related disorders has led to increase in the demand for gluten-free foods. Rice is a gluten-free and less allergenic cereal. However, bread made from rice flour, i.e., gluten-free rice bread, is generally of poor quality because rice flour cannot develop a network with gluten-like properties. In this study, we investigated the effects of protease treatment on gluten-free rice to improve the quality of its bread. Bread treated with a commercial protease from Bacillus stearothermophilus (thermoase) was of higher quality, i.e., good crumb appearance, high volume, and soft texture, depending on the amount of enzyme added. Rice proteins in the protease-treated bread were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, which showed that glutelins and prolamins were hardly digested by thermoase in comparison with other proteins. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that many cellular structures were formed in the thermoase-treated bread; however, these structures were rare in the untreated control. Bread crumb color was not affected by the treatment. The staling rate was much lower for the thermoase-treated bread than for the control. These results indicate that thermoase treatment can be successfully used to improve the quality of gluten-free rice bread by partial digestion of rice proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Dextrins were extracted in water from bread made from pre-harvest sprouted wheat or standard flour supplemented with exogenousalpha-amylases. The dextrins were separated by gel permeation chromatography and the dextrin content (% of crumb weight) determined for different degree of polymerisation (DP) size classes; DP 1–2, DP 3–10, DP 11–50, DP 51–200 and DP >200. There were significant correlations between the dextrin content in each size class and crumb stickiness (r=0·84–0·91, 22 df ). The most significant correlation (r=0·96) was between total dextrin content and crumb stickiness. Addition of dextrins of various DP ranges from various sources to standard flour produced bread with sticky crumb. Again, the degree of stickiness was generally related to the amount of total dextrin in the crumb and not to size distribution of dextrins. In this instance, extensive enzymic hydrolysis of starch was not necessary to produce sticky crumb; the dextrins caused crumb stickiness directly. Addition of dextrins to reconstituted gluten–starch flour produced bread with unexpectedly low dextrin levels and correspondingly low stickiness scores. It is concluded that, to produce sticky crumb, high levels of dextrin of any size are necessary in the crumb; a sticky mass is produced when dextrins dissolve in the excess «free» water that is normally «bound» to starch, gluten and other insoluble components of bread crumb.  相似文献   

10.
Frozen storage of bread has a substantial impact on the dynamics of water and ice in the crumb and crust. In this study, the impact was characterized using wheat bread stored at −18 °C for a long term of ∼4 months. The frozen bread incurred a considerable loss of the crumb water that migrated out and formed ice crystals on the bread surface. Such a moisture decrease underwent more rapidly for the bread stored without intact crust, suggesting the specific role of crust during frozen storage. Moisture also redistributed significantly within the frozen crumb, resulting in an elevated crumb heterogeneity of freezable water. This redistribution of freezable water was accompanied by a progressive recrystallization of the crumb-borne ice crystals, which were measured to grow into bulk sizes using a modified calorimetric procedure for analyzing the crumb samples at their as-frozen states.  相似文献   

11.
The difficulty in finding gluten-free bread and its high price make it necessary to prolong its shelf life to facilitate its availability. Freezing is an interesting alternative. The storage of bread at over zero temperatures, 20 °C and 4 °C, showed faster staling at refrigerator temperatures. A good relationship between crumb firmness and the extent of starch recrystallization was obtained, although the effect of water loss was also detected. The study of freezing and frozen storage at −14 °C and −28 °C for 7 days showed a substantial effect of the storage temperature on gluten-free bread quality and shelf life. Breads stored at −28 °C retained a quality similar to that of fresh breads while a marked deterioration of the breads stored at −14 °C was observed. This effect, the strongest on bread texture, was a result of starch recrystallization. The glass transition, Tg’ and onset of ice melting, Tm’ of the maximally freeze-concentrated bread crumb were −37.1 ± 0.6 °C and −19.3 ± 0.2 °C respectively. The higher amount of unfrozen water at −14 °C could explain the acceleration of reactions responsible for bread staling during frozen storage. The use of storage temperatures below Tm’ is recommended to retain high quality of the gluten-free bread during frozen storage.  相似文献   

12.
Quality characteristics of northern-style Chinese steamed bread (CSB) prepared from two soft red winter (SRW) wheat flours blended with 0–30% waxy wheat flour (WWF) were analyzed to estimate the influence of starch amylose content. The increased proportion of WWF in blends raised mixograph absorption with insignificant changes in protein content and dough strength-related parameters. WWF incorporation generally increased specific volume and crumb softness of CSB. The analysis of covariance revealed that CSB quality attributes were little affected by protein content and dough strength-related parameters, indicating that starch amylose content was largely responsible for the changes in CSB quality. Flour blends with 5–10% WWF, of which starch amylose content was 22.4–24.7%, produced CSB with superior crumb structure compared to other blends, but insignificant changes in surface smoothness, stress relaxation and total score compared to the respective control wheat flours. Flour blends with 15% WWF to produce a starch amylose content of 21.4–22.7% exhibited reduced staling of CSB with total scores comparable to the respective control wheat flours. CSB prepared from blends with more than 10% WWF exhibited a higher soluble starch content, indicative of reduced starch retrogradation, than that prepared from wheat flours without WWF during storage for 3 days.  相似文献   

13.
Crispness of bread is rapidly lost because of water migration inside the crumb towards the crust. How crumb properties determine this process independent of crust properties has not been examined before. Therefore, the aim of this study was to analyze and explain the influence of crumb morphology on the overall crispness retention. Crispness retention was determined by analyzing the acoustic emission of breads differing in either crust or crumb morphology. When crumb morphology is coarse with a lower number of large connections between the air cells, the effective diffusion coefficient is reduced. This effective diffusion coefficient of crumb, which equals approximately half the value of air, was estimated using X-ray micro-computer tomography images of crumb pieces. If the crumb has a lower effective diffusion coefficient, bread with similar crust properties has significantly longer crispness retention. Despite this, our data show that variations in properties of crust, which has 30 times higher permeability than crumb, have a larger impact on crispness retention than variations in properties of crumb.  相似文献   

14.
The granule size distributions of starches isolated from eight bread wheat flours were determined. Breads were baked from the same flours by varying fermentation time, mixing speed and work input according to a central composite experimental design. Response surface equations were calculated for the bread characteristics loaf volume, weight, form ratio (height/width) and crumb firmness. Multivariate regression (PLS2) was used to relate the starch granule size distribution spectra to the coefficient matrices. The models obtained by PLS2 explained 55% and 48% of the total variance in the response surface coefficients for bread weight, and form ratio respectively, with correlation coefficients 0·74 and 0·69. No models were obtained for crumb firmness and loaf volume. The correlations obtained with the constant terms indicated that high weights and form ratios were promoted by small A-granules (size 12 μm). The effect of starch granule size distribution on the bread characteristics was modified by work input and mixing speed, while fermentation time had no effect.  相似文献   

15.
The mechanical properties of breads made of potato or wheat starch were measured in two successive compression/decompression cycles. From the shape of the stress–strain curves, the initial modulus and the critical stress and strain could be derived; the critical stress and strain are those at which the crumb structure starts to collapse. The magnitude of the stress–strain related parameters changed markedly during storage. The initial modulus, as well as the critical stress for structural collapse, increased, and the critical strain decreased. Moreover, the resistance of bread crumb to collapse of structure in compression decreased. The mechanical properties of potato starch bread changed more rapidly than those of wheat starch bread. The results are discussed in relation to the structure of the starch breads on different levels, i.e. from molecular (amylopectin recrystallisation) to macroscopic (sponge structure). It is concluded that the mechanical properties of the starch breads are determined by the mechanical properties of the condensed lamellae and beams consisting of irregularly shaped, partly swollen starch granules as well as by the distribution of the thickness of the lamellae and beams.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of the recombinantly produced xylanase B (XynB) from Thermotoga maritima MSB8 on the quality of frozen partially baked bread (FPBB) was investigated. Addition of XynB to wheat flour dough resulted in a significant increase in dough extensibility (L), swelling (G), and a decrease in dough resistance to deformation (P), configuration. Bread crumb characteristics were studied by differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) and dynamic-mechanical analysis (DMA). The results show that addition of XynB leads to improvements in the bread quality of FPBB and retards bread staling compared to the control. The greatest improvements were obtained in specific volume (+35.2%) and crumb firmness (−40.0%). The control FPBB was significantly firmer in texture and higher in amylopectin recrystallization than the bread with XynB. During frozen storage of FPBB with and without XynB for 8 weeks, the crumb firmness increased gradually and the specific volume slightly decreased with the frozen storage time. The ΔH values of freezable water (FW) endothermic transitions increased with frozen storage time for all samples. However, addition of XynB lowered the ΔH values indicating a decrease in FW. Therefore, XynB is useful in improving the quality of FPBB. DMA was also used to monitor the shrinking behavior of the samples. Addition of XynB increased the contraction during chilling but significantly diminished the total shrinking and frozen-state shrinking of the bread crumb during the freezing process.  相似文献   

17.
Crispness is among the most important factors that the consumer uses to assess the quality of crispy bread. However, this quality attribute is rapidly lost after baking. It is known that crispness retention can be increased more than eight times by enhancing the water vapor permeability of the crust. Current methods to achieve this, i.e., puncturing the bread before baking, require an extra process step. We hypothesize that cracks that appear spontaneously on the crust surface after baking can also enhance water vapor permeability and therefore improve crispness retention. We were able to confirm this hypothesis by preparing composite breads containing the same crumb but different crusts, with crust recipes of varying starch/protein ratios. Crusts systems that were generally high in gelatinized starch content and poor in evenly distributed gluten were more prone to crack after the whole process of part-baking, freezing, and baking off. These cracks led to an increased water vapor permeability of the crust and an eight times longer instrumental crispness retention compared to standard bread. In this paper we also discuss possible causes for crack formation in the crust. We hypothesize that effective cracks are caused by thermal shock in materials with a low ability to dissipate energy.  相似文献   

18.
To study the kinetics of the bread baking process, transverse relaxation (T2) of protons was measured during a baking process performed inside the magnet of a pulsed low field1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) instrument. Experimental NMR relaxation data were analysed both by chemometric data analysis and by multi-exponential curve-fitting. Throughout the entire baking process from dough to bread three T2-components were determined. During the NMR-baking process significant shifts were observed in the characteristic time constants at c. 55 °C (gelatinisation of starch) and at c. 85 °C. In a second experiment staling of white bread crumb aged 0–8 days was investigated by texture analysis and NMR relaxation. High correlations (r>0·9) between texture parameters and NMR relaxation data of bread crumb were found by partial least squares regression (PLSR) models. Firmness and elasticity as measured by a Texture Analyser were predicted with an estimated error (RMSECV) of 150 (range 200–2200) and 0·032 (range 0·4–0·7), respectively. Future texture of the bread samples was also predictable by use of NMR relaxation data from the early storage period (day 0 to day 3).  相似文献   

19.
Wheat puroindolines (PINs) spontaneously adsorb at air/water interfaces and show excellent foaming properties. They can positively impact bread quality, in which the formation of stable foam is important for product quality. The impact of endogenous PINs on bread quality was studied by preparing gluten–starch blends from isolated gluten and starch fractions with different PIN levels, which allowed largely retaining the interaction between PINs and flour components. Our results indicate that blends with high PIN levels yielded more homogeneous crumb structures with fine gas cells than bread made with blends containing medium or low PIN levels. However, the mechanism by which PINs exert this crumb improving effect is not clear. Varying PIN levels impacted neither dough extensibility nor did it result in different PIN levels in dough liquor. Lipid removal yielded bread with a less homogeneous crumb gas cell distribution, indicating that lipids also are required to obtain good crumb structure.  相似文献   

20.
Lipids exhibit important functional properties in bread making, although they are present in lower levels than starch or protein. They originate from flour, in which they are endogenously present, or from added shortening and/or surfactants. This review discusses lipid sources and their interactions during the entire process of bread making from dough mixing to fermentation, proofing, baking and the stored product. The focus is on lipid interactions with starch and gluten proteins, their role in gas cell stabilisation and their impact on bread loaf volume, crumb structure and crumb firming. Widely accepted views on lipid functionality, although often opposing, are presented and critically discussed.  相似文献   

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