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Effect of Processing Methods on Antinutritional Factors (Oxalate, Phytate, and Tannin) and Their Interaction with Minerals (Calcium, Iron, and Zinc) in Red, White, and Black Kidney Beans

The purpose of this study was to assess how different processing techniques affected mineral compositions, antinutritional factors, and their interactions in red, white, and black kidney beans consumed in Ethiopia. Mineral contents were found to be 41–44, 58–78, and 112–126 mg Ca/100 g in the raw, s...

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Autores principales: Abera, Serkalem, Yohannes, Weldegebriel, Chandravanshi, Bhagwan Singh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10599953/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37886707
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/6762027
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author Abera, Serkalem
Yohannes, Weldegebriel
Chandravanshi, Bhagwan Singh
author_facet Abera, Serkalem
Yohannes, Weldegebriel
Chandravanshi, Bhagwan Singh
author_sort Abera, Serkalem
collection PubMed
description The purpose of this study was to assess how different processing techniques affected mineral compositions, antinutritional factors, and their interactions in red, white, and black kidney beans consumed in Ethiopia. Mineral contents were found to be 41–44, 58–78, and 112–126 mg Ca/100 g in the raw, soaked, and cooked samples, respectively. Iron content in the raw, soaked and cooked samples were found to be 2.77–2.97, 1.94–2.20 and 2.87–3.28 mg Fe/100 g, respectively, showing 26–30% loss on soaking followed by 33–48% increase on cooking. While Zn content in the raw, soaked and cooked samples were found to be 2.47–3.26, 3.34–4.68 and 2.83–3.31 mg Zn/100 g, respectively, showing 35–43% increase on soaking followed by 15–29% decrease on cooking. In the case of antinutrients, both treatments showed incredible decrements. Phytate in the raw samples was 178-179 mg/100 g and showed a 12–16% decrement on soaking and a 37-38% decrement up on cooking, oxalate was 1.5–1.8 mg/100 g in the raw samples and showed a 4.4–13% decrement during treatments, and tannin in the raw samples was 102–160 mg/100 g and showed a 23–30% decrement on soaking, followed by 21–41% during cooking. Phytate : Ca and oxalate : Ca molar ratios in soaked and cooked samples were within the critical values in the raw samples. In contrast, phytate : Zn and Ca × phytate : Zn in all treatments were found to be within the critical value, confirming the good bioavailability of zinc in all the samples, while phytate : Fe was found over the critical value, showing its poor availability.
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spelling pubmed-105999532023-10-26 Effect of Processing Methods on Antinutritional Factors (Oxalate, Phytate, and Tannin) and Their Interaction with Minerals (Calcium, Iron, and Zinc) in Red, White, and Black Kidney Beans Abera, Serkalem Yohannes, Weldegebriel Chandravanshi, Bhagwan Singh Int J Anal Chem Research Article The purpose of this study was to assess how different processing techniques affected mineral compositions, antinutritional factors, and their interactions in red, white, and black kidney beans consumed in Ethiopia. Mineral contents were found to be 41–44, 58–78, and 112–126 mg Ca/100 g in the raw, soaked, and cooked samples, respectively. Iron content in the raw, soaked and cooked samples were found to be 2.77–2.97, 1.94–2.20 and 2.87–3.28 mg Fe/100 g, respectively, showing 26–30% loss on soaking followed by 33–48% increase on cooking. While Zn content in the raw, soaked and cooked samples were found to be 2.47–3.26, 3.34–4.68 and 2.83–3.31 mg Zn/100 g, respectively, showing 35–43% increase on soaking followed by 15–29% decrease on cooking. In the case of antinutrients, both treatments showed incredible decrements. Phytate in the raw samples was 178-179 mg/100 g and showed a 12–16% decrement on soaking and a 37-38% decrement up on cooking, oxalate was 1.5–1.8 mg/100 g in the raw samples and showed a 4.4–13% decrement during treatments, and tannin in the raw samples was 102–160 mg/100 g and showed a 23–30% decrement on soaking, followed by 21–41% during cooking. Phytate : Ca and oxalate : Ca molar ratios in soaked and cooked samples were within the critical values in the raw samples. In contrast, phytate : Zn and Ca × phytate : Zn in all treatments were found to be within the critical value, confirming the good bioavailability of zinc in all the samples, while phytate : Fe was found over the critical value, showing its poor availability. Hindawi 2023-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10599953/ /pubmed/37886707 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/6762027 Text en Copyright © 2023 Serkalem Abera et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Abera, Serkalem
Yohannes, Weldegebriel
Chandravanshi, Bhagwan Singh
Effect of Processing Methods on Antinutritional Factors (Oxalate, Phytate, and Tannin) and Their Interaction with Minerals (Calcium, Iron, and Zinc) in Red, White, and Black Kidney Beans
title Effect of Processing Methods on Antinutritional Factors (Oxalate, Phytate, and Tannin) and Their Interaction with Minerals (Calcium, Iron, and Zinc) in Red, White, and Black Kidney Beans
title_full Effect of Processing Methods on Antinutritional Factors (Oxalate, Phytate, and Tannin) and Their Interaction with Minerals (Calcium, Iron, and Zinc) in Red, White, and Black Kidney Beans
title_fullStr Effect of Processing Methods on Antinutritional Factors (Oxalate, Phytate, and Tannin) and Their Interaction with Minerals (Calcium, Iron, and Zinc) in Red, White, and Black Kidney Beans
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Processing Methods on Antinutritional Factors (Oxalate, Phytate, and Tannin) and Their Interaction with Minerals (Calcium, Iron, and Zinc) in Red, White, and Black Kidney Beans
title_short Effect of Processing Methods on Antinutritional Factors (Oxalate, Phytate, and Tannin) and Their Interaction with Minerals (Calcium, Iron, and Zinc) in Red, White, and Black Kidney Beans
title_sort effect of processing methods on antinutritional factors (oxalate, phytate, and tannin) and their interaction with minerals (calcium, iron, and zinc) in red, white, and black kidney beans
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10599953/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37886707
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/6762027
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