Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4516043 Journal of Cereal Science 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

The potential of sourdough to improve bread quality of barley and oat enriched wheat breads may depend on the characteristics of the added flour (cereal type, variety, extraction rate). We compared the effect of different barley flours and oat bran (substitution level 40%), unfermented and as sourdoughs (20% of total flour), on composite wheat dough and bread characteristics by combining empirical rheological analyses (DoughLab, SMS/Kieffer Dough and Gluten Extensibility Rig) with small-scale baking of hearth loaves. Whole grain barley flour sourdough increased resistance to extension (Rmax) of the dough and improved the form ratio of hearth loaves compared to unfermented whole grain barley flour. However, sourdough showed little effect on the breads prepared with sifted barley flour or oat bran. The breads made with oat bran showed highest bread volume, lowest crumb firmness and highest β-glucan calcofluor weight average molecular weight (MW). The heat treatment of oat bran inactivated endogenous enzymes resulting in less β-glucan degradation. High MW β-glucans will increase the viscosity of the doughs water phase, which in turn may stabilise gas cells and may therefore be the reason for the higher bread volume of the oat bran breads observed in our study.

► Sourdough improves the structure (Rmax) of dough containing whole grain barley. ► Sourdough improves the quality of bread containing whole grain barley. ► Sourdough may be useful to improve whole grain bread quality in general. ► β-glucan content and MW is positively correlated with composite wheat bread volume. ► β-glucan has a potential to improve the quality of bread containing barley or oat.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
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