Abstract

Gluten-free bread (GFB) usually has a lower nutritional value than its traditional counterparts and is deficient in health-promoting substances. Therefore, GFB is often enriched in gluten-free components containing high levels of bioactive substances. In this work, an attempt has been made to enrich GFB with rice flour-based extruded preparations produced at 80 and 120°C with a share of 10 and 20% sour cherry pomace. The study material consisted of the abovementioned preparations together with breads produced with their 10% share. In order to prove that the extruded preparations could be the source of phenolic compounds, their level was determined. The influence of the applied additions was assessed taking into account nutritional composition (protein, fat, ash, and carbohydrates), level of the phenolic compounds (total phenolic content, flavonoids, anthocyanins, and phenolic acids), antioxidant potential, and physical properties of the breads (texture volume, color). It was shown that the extrudates with a share of fruit pomace cause an enrichment of gluten-free breads in bioactive compounds. The gluten-free breads enriched in extrudates with sour cherry pomace obtained at 120°C contained even 6 times more polyphenols than breads with extrudates obtained at 80°C. At the same time, these breads contained the highest levels of flavonoids and phenolic acids among all the analyzed samples. Bread with the addition of the extrudate produced with 20% fruit pomace at 120°C was the most favorable in terms of bioactive compounds (total phenolic content, flavonoids, anthocyanins, and phenolic acids) and antioxidative activity. The abovementioned bread showed the highest amount of total, soluble and insoluble fiber, and a significant amount of ash and sugars and revealed the lowest hardness during 3 days of storage, in comparison with the other samples.

Highlights

  • Strict elimination of cereals and grain products containing gluten from the diet seems to be the only efficient treatment of celiac disease

  • The aim of the study was to analyze the influence of extruded sour cherry pomace–rice flour preparations (ECPRF) on the nutritional, prohealth components of gluten-free bread

  • Extruded preparations based on rice flour with fruit pomace (10 and 20%) processed at 80 and 120°C are new functional ingredients for gluten-free bread enrichment

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Summary

Introduction

Strict elimination of cereals and grain products containing gluten from the diet seems to be the only efficient treatment of celiac disease. Sour cherry pomace containing large quantities of bioactive and nutritive compounds seems to be a valuable and very cheap component in a production of gluten-free bread. Extrusion seems to be especially suitable as a method, because it allows an immediate conversion of microbiologically unstable raw material into a sterile, dry component, which could be stored, ground, and added into various food matrices. Such processing is known to result in changes of dietary fiber into more soluble forms, highly beneficial for human health. In the case of bioactive polyphenols, extrusion could cause their decrease due to decomposition, or their increase by the release from fiber, making them more bioavailable, depending on the parameters of extrusion [16]

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