0000000000671410
AUTHOR
Neli Darie
The Effect of Some Commercial Fibers on Dough Rheology
Bread is largely consumed and could be used as a carrier for different nutrients. Fibers play an important role in human nutrition but the bread are depleted in this nutrient. For fibers, supplementation could be used different sources. The fibers needed to be tested before their use in breadmaking. This work investigates how some commercial fibers (Exafine, Apple AF12, Potato KF 200, Oat HF 200 and Wheat WF400) influence the rheology of dough at 10 and 15 % addition. All fibers increased the water absorption and development time because of competition for water between fibers and flour component. Product Apple AF12 deteriorates the dough rheology by dough stability reduction and increases …
Non-Enzymatic Water-Soluble Antioxidants Bioanalysis in Some Teas and Juices by PCL Method
Non-enzymatic water-soluble antioxidants from different teas (black, green, peppermint), coffee, natural extract of rosemary and fruit juices (apple, grape, grapefruit, kiwifruit) were quantized by measuring their chemiluminescence in order to establish their power to protect the living beings from the free radicals. Among the samples high values of antioxidative capacity presents green tea (655 mmol AU) (AU=ascorbic units) and kiwi fruit juice (31 mmol AU). The maximum measuring times are less than 3 minutes. The sensivity of the photo-induced chemiluminescence (PCL) method was very high: nanomolar concentrations of non-enzymatic watwer-soluble antioxidative substances, as ascorbic acid un…
Rheological Evaluation of Some Commercial Xylanases
The arabinoxylans play and the xylanases play an important role breadmaking. For a better selection of xylanases, it is necessary to understand how they work in breadmaking. At the same activity, the xylanases have different effect on dough rheology. The xylanases activity measured through birch xylan hydrolysis it is not correlated with extensographic effects. Weak but better correlations were observed when the xylanase activity was measured as the ability to decrease the viscosity of soluble wheat arabinoxylans solution.