Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4516150 Journal of Cereal Science 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Oat malt is a nutritionally rich ingredient mainly used in a small number of speciality products. The aim of this study was to evaluate the suitability of oat malt in wheat baking. The effect of oat malt on bread and dough properties at levels ranging from 0.5% to 5% was studied and compared with barley and wheat malts. The addition of all malts increased loaf specific volumes. Barley and wheat malts at levels above 2.5% led to a sticky and coarse crumb, but the effect of oat malt on the crumb grain was negligible. Rheological characterisation could not explain the superior baking performance of oat malt, as it increased extensibility and decreased resistance extensively indicating weakening of the extensional properties of the gluten network. The high lipolytic activity may have compensated for the loss of dough strength by improving the surface properties of gas cells. The results show that oat malt can be used in wheat baking to improve the loaf volume and nutritional quality without the detrimental effects associated with the excess amylolytic activity of barley and wheat malts.

► Oat malt flour had low amylolytic but high lipolytic activities. ► The addition of oat malt to wheat dough weakened the extensional properties but increased the specific volume of wheat bread. ► Wheat and barley malts had a detrimental effect on crumb grain.

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