Dynamic rheological behavior of high-amylose wheat dough during various heating stages: Insight from its starch characteristics.

Int J Biol Macromol

Grain, Oil and Food Engineering Technology Research Center of the State Grain and Reserves Administration, Key Laboratory of Henan Province, College of Food Science and Technology, Henan University of Technology, Zhengzhou, Henan 450001, China; Food Laboratory of Zhongyuan, Luohe, Henan 462300, China. Electronic address:

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored how high-amylose wheat (HAW) dough behaves rheologically during heating, focusing on the effects of starch properties.
  • At temperatures from 30°C to 90°C, HAW dough showed low torque values due to less starch swelling, and demonstrated good resistance to shear and enzyme degradation at 90°C.
  • The findings suggest that HAW dough’s rheological behaviors mirror their starch pasting profiles, which is important for creating firm-textured, low-viscosity food products.

Article Abstract

The objective of this study was to understand how the dynamic rheological behaviors of high-amylose wheat (HAW) dough during various heating stages measured using a mixolab were affected by the starch properties. At the heating stage of 30 °C - 90 °C, low minimum (C2) and peak (C3) torques were observed for HAW doughs, which resulted from their reduced starch granule swelling. During holding at 90 °C, HAW doughs had low minimum (C4) and C3 - C4 torques, indicating a good resistance to mechanical shear and endogenous enzyme degradation. HAW doughs also had low final (C5) and setback (C5 - C4) torques, consistent with their low starch swelling power and solubility. The increased amylose in HAW starch formed long-chain double-helical B-type polymorph and amylose-lipid complex, which resulted in high starch gelatinization-temperatures and enthalpy change, low swelling power and solubility, low pasting viscosity, and high resistance of swollen granules to mechanical shear and enzyme degradation. The overall patterns of dough-rheological behavior of HAW doughs during heating were similar to their respective starch pasting profiles, indicating that starch was the dominant contributor to the dough rheology during heating. This study provides useful information for food applications and manufacturing of HAW-based products, especially none-fermented products requiring firm texture and low viscosity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.132111DOI Listing

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