Abstract

Due to increase of the population affected by Coeliac disease and awareness of consumers about the relationship between food and health, the production of cereal products from raw materials other than wheat is of interest. The aim of the work was to produce good quality gluten-free spaghettis, based on sorghum, amaranth and maize flour. Response surface methodology was applied to determine optimal formulation for the production of pasta. The resulting products of the experimental design were characterized regarding humidity, color, density, water activity, texture (firmness and elasticity), optimal cooking time, cooking weight, and cooking loss. The main trials were compared to two industrials gluten-free spaghetti. The results showed that water activity and cooking weight of the main trials were similar to the industrials pasta, but were really different for the other studied parameters. The optimal formulation was determined in order to obtain pasta with low cooking loss and optimal color and texture firmness. It utilized 12% egg white, 60% maize flour, 30% sorghum flour, 10% amaranth flour, 2.4% guar gum and 36% water. The optimal formulated pasta was evaluated by an untrained consumer panel in a sensorial analysis to show the consumer acceptance. The product presents nutritional benefits, the color was appreciated, but the texture was granular and crumbly which was not liked by the consumers.

Highlights

  • Pasta is a traditional Italian cereal-based food that is popular worldwide because of its convenience, versatility, sensory and nutritional value

  • To evaluate the results of each analysis, the samples were compared to two industrial pastas: Barilla spaghetti, made with rice and maize flour, and Royal Quinoa spaghetti, made with quinoa flour

  • The main trials were dried at room temperature for 24 hours, but the drying technology of industrial pasta is certainly different, explaining the difference between them

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Summary

Introduction

Pasta is a traditional Italian cereal-based food that is popular worldwide because of its convenience, versatility, sensory and nutritional value. Coeliac disease is a chronic immune-mediated enteropathy triggered by the ingestion of gluten in wheat, rye and barley, in patients who are HLA-DQ2 or HLA-DQ8 positive (Verdu et al, 2015) It is characterized by a strong immune response to certain amino acid sequences found in the prolamin fractions of gluten, resulting in the destruction of the villi in the small intestine and leading to the malabsorption of nutrients, adversely affecting all systems of the body (Ciacci et al, 2007). In the United States, about one percent of the population is affected by the Coeliac disease and one person in one hundred people suffer from celiac disease worldwide Such a rate establishes that CD is the most common food intolerances (Broz & Horne, 2007). It appears that this disease, and other gluten intolerances are increasing worldwide

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