Characterisation of a High Fibre Flour Prepared from Soy Milk By-Product and Its Potential Use in White Wheat Bread.

Foods

School of Environmental and Life Sciences, College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle, 10 Chittaway Road, Ourimbah, NSW 2258, Australia.

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the viability of using dried soybean by-product (SMB) as a flour substitute in white bread production.
  • SMB100, which is made from wet soybean by-product, has a high nutritional profile, boasting 40.6% dietary fiber and 26.5% protein.
  • While replacing up to 5% of wheat flour with SMB100 improves fiber content without degrading bread quality, higher substitutions negatively impact the bread's volume, density, and texture, indicating the need for further research to optimize recipes.

Article Abstract

The commercial production of soy milk renders a large quantity of wet soybean by-product (SMB), which is typically dumped, incinerated, or partially used as animal fodder. This wet SMB has a high moisture content that is rich in nutritional and biologically active compounds. This study aimed to characterise the composition and properties of a flour milled from SMB dried at 100 °C (SMB100) and assess its possible application as a fibre substitute in white bread. The results showed that SMB100 has high levels of dietary fibre (40.6%) and protein (26.5%). It also contains high levels of saponins (31.4 mg/g) and isoflavones (698.0 µg/g). SMB100 has a light-yellow colour with low moisture content and water activity (8.2% and 0.55, respectively). The results also indicated that replacement of wheat flour with SMB100 at 10 or 12.5% by flour weight negatively impacted the raising volume, density, and texture of white bread. Alternatively, substituting wheat flour with 5% of SMB100, did not significantly impact the physical properties of white bread, while significantly improving its dietary fibre content in comparison with the control, revealing that SMB100 is a potential substitute of wheat flour for improvement of dietary fibre in bread. Future studies are needed to optimise bread formulation and improve the processing condition which produces quality white bread with high dietary fibre using SMB100.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9740637PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11233921DOI Listing

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