Tags

Type your tag names separated by a space and hit enter

Cooking and sensorial quality, nutritional composition and functional properties of cold-extruded rice/white bean gluten-free fettuccine fortified with whole carob fruit flour.
Food Funct. 2020 Sep 23; 11(9):7913-7924.FF

Abstract

A different rice/white bean-based gluten-free fettuccine (rice 0-100%, bean 0-100%) fortified with 10% carob fruit has been developed. The proximate composition, total and resistant starch, and total, soluble and insoluble dietary fibre content as well as the cooking and sensorial quality of uncooked and cooked pasta were determined. All the novel gluten-free fettuccine forms showed good cooking quality (cooking loss < 10%) highlighting that those containing the carob fruit had better nutritional and healthy profiles than the commercial gluten-free rice pasta; they were low in fat (10-fold) and high in protein (on average 3.6-fold) with resistant starch (16%) and dietary fibres (2.4-fold). The cooking process increased (p < 0.05) the protein and total dietary fibre content but reduced the total and resistant starch. The addition of carob fruit increased the total dietary fibre content, thus improving the functional value of fettuccine. Considering the sensorial analysis, fettuccine produced with 40% bean and 10% carob could be well accepted by consumers and can be advised as a functional food.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Food Technology Department, SGIT-INIA, Ctra de La Coruña, Km 7.5, 28040 Madrid, Spain. mmartin@inia.es.Food Technology Department, SGIT-INIA, Ctra de La Coruña, Km 7.5, 28040 Madrid, Spain. mmartin@inia.es.Centre for the Food Quality, SGIT-INIA, C/Universidad s/n, 42004 Soria, Spain.Food Technology Department, SGIT-INIA, Ctra de La Coruña, Km 7.5, 28040 Madrid, Spain. mmartin@inia.es.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

32815934

Citation

Arribas, Claudia, et al. "Cooking and Sensorial Quality, Nutritional Composition and Functional Properties of Cold-extruded Rice/white Bean Gluten-free Fettuccine Fortified With Whole Carob Fruit Flour." Food & Function, vol. 11, no. 9, 2020, pp. 7913-7924.
Arribas C, Cabellos B, Guillamón E, et al. Cooking and sensorial quality, nutritional composition and functional properties of cold-extruded rice/white bean gluten-free fettuccine fortified with whole carob fruit flour. Food Funct. 2020;11(9):7913-7924.
Arribas, C., Cabellos, B., Guillamón, E., & Pedrosa, M. M. (2020). Cooking and sensorial quality, nutritional composition and functional properties of cold-extruded rice/white bean gluten-free fettuccine fortified with whole carob fruit flour. Food & Function, 11(9), 7913-7924. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0fo01470b
Arribas C, et al. Cooking and Sensorial Quality, Nutritional Composition and Functional Properties of Cold-extruded Rice/white Bean Gluten-free Fettuccine Fortified With Whole Carob Fruit Flour. Food Funct. 2020 Sep 23;11(9):7913-7924. PubMed PMID: 32815934.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Cooking and sensorial quality, nutritional composition and functional properties of cold-extruded rice/white bean gluten-free fettuccine fortified with whole carob fruit flour. AU - Arribas,Claudia, AU - Cabellos,Blanca, AU - Guillamón,Eva, AU - Pedrosa,Mercedes M, PY - 2020/8/21/pubmed PY - 2021/5/7/medline PY - 2020/8/21/entrez SP - 7913 EP - 7924 JF - Food & function JO - Food Funct VL - 11 IS - 9 N2 - A different rice/white bean-based gluten-free fettuccine (rice 0-100%, bean 0-100%) fortified with 10% carob fruit has been developed. The proximate composition, total and resistant starch, and total, soluble and insoluble dietary fibre content as well as the cooking and sensorial quality of uncooked and cooked pasta were determined. All the novel gluten-free fettuccine forms showed good cooking quality (cooking loss < 10%) highlighting that those containing the carob fruit had better nutritional and healthy profiles than the commercial gluten-free rice pasta; they were low in fat (10-fold) and high in protein (on average 3.6-fold) with resistant starch (16%) and dietary fibres (2.4-fold). The cooking process increased (p < 0.05) the protein and total dietary fibre content but reduced the total and resistant starch. The addition of carob fruit increased the total dietary fibre content, thus improving the functional value of fettuccine. Considering the sensorial analysis, fettuccine produced with 40% bean and 10% carob could be well accepted by consumers and can be advised as a functional food. SN - 2042-650X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/32815934/Cooking_and_sensorial_quality_nutritional_composition_and_functional_properties_of_cold_extruded_rice/white_bean_gluten_free_fettuccine_fortified_with_whole_carob_fruit_flour_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -