Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1184085 Food Chemistry 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Reconstitution baking test is suitable to determine functional effects of lipids.•Defatted flour has to be prepared with 2-propanol at 20 °C.•Defatting with WSB (20 °C) or 2-propanol (75 °C) yields poor functional properties.•Lipids isolated with water-saturated 1-butanol are most suitable for reconstitution.•CLSM, analytical, and rheological methods show changes in gluten network caused by extraction.

A microscale reconstitution baking test, using wheat flour defatted with 2-propanol at 20 °C, was established to determine the functional effects of lipids isolated from lipase-treated wheat dough. Proper selection of solvent and extraction temperature was of major importance to maintain the functionality of defatted flour. Dough and gluten from flour defatted with water-saturated 1-butanol (WSB; extracted at 20 °C) and 2-propanol (extracted at 75 °C) had inferior extensibility and loaf volume compared to control flour extracted with 2-propanol at 20 °C. Quantitation of gluten proteins showed that defatting with WSB (20 °C) or 2-propanol (75 °C) decreased the gliadin and increased the glutenin content. Possible reasons were thiol-disulfide interchange reactions, caused either by heat (2-propanol, 75 °C) or by the solvent WSB, which affected gluten proteins. Confocal laser scanning microscopy showed that regular, interconnected gluten structures were only present in dough from flour defatted with 2-propanol at 20 °C.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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