Assessing Acerola Powder as Substitute for Ascorbic Acid as a Bread Improver.

Foods

Food Technology Area, College of Agricultural Engineering, University of Valladolid, 34004 Palencia, Spain.

Published: May 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Bread is a commonly consumed product, and there's a growing consumer preference for less additive content in its production.
  • Acerola fruit, known for its high ascorbic acid content, can be used as a natural oxidant in bread making, and this study compares its effects to traditional ascorbic acid.
  • The results show that acerola powder enhances dough strength and development while improving bread quality without affecting color, making it a viable natural alternative to synthetic oxidants.

Article Abstract

Bread is one of the most widely consumed products in the world. The use of oxidants is common in bread production, but consumers are demanding products with less additives. Acerola is the fruit with the highest ascorbic acid content and, once dried, it can be used as an oxidant in baking. The use of acerola powder in bread making and its effect on bread quality is studied in this article and compared with the addition of ascorbic acid. For this purpose, flour properties and dough behaviour were analysed with a farinograph and an alveograph. Breads were elaborated with white wheat flour and wholemeal flour; specific volume, loaf height, weight loss, texture, colour, and cell structure were analysed. Acerola powder had similar effects to ascorbic acid: it increased the alveographic strength and the tenacity of the doughs without reducing extensibility; it incremented dough development time (DDT) and dough softening; it increased the specific volume of white wheat breads, and it reduced the hardness of white and wholemeal breads, without significant changes in crust or crumb colour. Therefore, acerola powder can be a natural alternative to the use of ascorbic acid as an improver in bread making.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9101182PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11091366DOI Listing

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