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Effect of physical states of nonpolar lipids on rheology, ultracentrifugation, and microstructure of wheat flour dough.

Watanabe, A ; Yokomizo, K and Eliasson, Ann-Charlotte LU (2003) In Cereal Chemistry 80(3). p.281-284
Abstract
In the previous study, we investigated effect of physical state of nonpolar lipids of gluten-starch model dough. This experiment examined a real wheat flour dough system to assess the role of fat crystals in the breadmaking processes. These experiments were performed with a baking test and an investigation of wheat flour dough through rheological measurements (both large and small deformations), scanning electron microscopy, and ultracentrifugation. As a result, we found that the added oil was absorbed in the gluten structure, causing the aggregation of the gluten, which gave rise to more elastic behavior. In contrast, solid fat seemed to be distributed uniformly between the starch granules in the dough, reducing the friction between the... (More)
In the previous study, we investigated effect of physical state of nonpolar lipids of gluten-starch model dough. This experiment examined a real wheat flour dough system to assess the role of fat crystals in the breadmaking processes. These experiments were performed with a baking test and an investigation of wheat flour dough through rheological measurements (both large and small deformations), scanning electron microscopy, and ultracentrifugation. As a result, we found that the added oil was absorbed in the gluten structure, causing the aggregation of the gluten, which gave rise to more elastic behavior. In contrast, solid fat seemed to be distributed uniformly between the starch granules in the dough, reducing the friction between the starch granules and facilitating thin gluten gel layers. These properties lead to the lower G(prime) value and the increased viscous behavior, which yields an increase in loaf volume. In addition, the supposed mechanism behind the large loaf volume described in the previous study was that fat provides a uniform distribution of the dough components, and that the dough can thus expand easily, resulting in a larger loaf volume, which was supported in the wheat flour dough system. In conclusion, we found that thin, expandable gluten films and the uniform dispersion of gluten and starch granules in the dough are prerequisites for attaining better baking performance. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Cereal Chemistry
volume
80
issue
3
pages
281 - 284
publisher
American Association of Cereal Chemists
external identifiers
  • wos:000183387500008
  • scopus:0037984013
ISSN
0009-0352
DOI
10.1094/CCHEM.2003.80.3.281
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
401d4dc1-a1ef-4f1d-bbe9-1410d61bb58f (old id 128341)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 16:20:19
date last changed
2023-11-14 09:34:50
@article{401d4dc1-a1ef-4f1d-bbe9-1410d61bb58f,
  abstract     = {{In the previous study, we investigated effect of physical state of nonpolar lipids of gluten-starch model dough. This experiment examined a real wheat flour dough system to assess the role of fat crystals in the breadmaking processes. These experiments were performed with a baking test and an investigation of wheat flour dough through rheological measurements (both large and small deformations), scanning electron microscopy, and ultracentrifugation. As a result, we found that the added oil was absorbed in the gluten structure, causing the aggregation of the gluten, which gave rise to more elastic behavior. In contrast, solid fat seemed to be distributed uniformly between the starch granules in the dough, reducing the friction between the starch granules and facilitating thin gluten gel layers. These properties lead to the lower G(prime) value and the increased viscous behavior, which yields an increase in loaf volume. In addition, the supposed mechanism behind the large loaf volume described in the previous study was that fat provides a uniform distribution of the dough components, and that the dough can thus expand easily, resulting in a larger loaf volume, which was supported in the wheat flour dough system. In conclusion, we found that thin, expandable gluten films and the uniform dispersion of gluten and starch granules in the dough are prerequisites for attaining better baking performance.}},
  author       = {{Watanabe, A and Yokomizo, K and Eliasson, Ann-Charlotte}},
  issn         = {{0009-0352}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{281--284}},
  publisher    = {{American Association of Cereal Chemists}},
  series       = {{Cereal Chemistry}},
  title        = {{Effect of physical states of nonpolar lipids on rheology, ultracentrifugation, and microstructure of wheat flour dough.}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/CCHEM.2003.80.3.281}},
  doi          = {{10.1094/CCHEM.2003.80.3.281}},
  volume       = {{80}},
  year         = {{2003}},
}