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Development of a nutrient‐dense complementary food using amaranth‐sorghum grains

Thin porridge from cereals and starchy tubers is a common complementary food in Sub Saharan Africa. It may be high in antinutrients, low in energy, and nutrient density hence inadequate in providing infants' high energy and nutrients requirements per unit body weight. Consequently, undernourish...

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Autores principales: Okoth, Judith Kanensi, Ochola, Sophie Atieno, Gikonyo, Nicholas K., Makokha, Anselimo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5217873/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28070319
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.367
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author Okoth, Judith Kanensi
Ochola, Sophie Atieno
Gikonyo, Nicholas K.
Makokha, Anselimo
author_facet Okoth, Judith Kanensi
Ochola, Sophie Atieno
Gikonyo, Nicholas K.
Makokha, Anselimo
author_sort Okoth, Judith Kanensi
collection PubMed
description Thin porridge from cereals and starchy tubers is a common complementary food in Sub Saharan Africa. It may be high in antinutrients, low in energy, and nutrient density hence inadequate in providing infants' high energy and nutrients requirements per unit body weight. Consequently, undernourishment levels among children under 5 years are high. Therefore, there is need to avail nutrient‐dense complementary foods especially for children in low‐resource settings. The study was aimed at developing a nutrient‐dense complementary food from amaranth and sorghum grains. Amaranth grain, a pseudocereal, though rarely used as a complementary food in Kenya has a higher nutritional quality than other staples. Plant‐based foods are known to have high levels of antinutrients. Steeping and germination were used to reduce the levels of antinutrients and enhance the bioavailability of minerals in the grains. Various steeped and germinated amaranth and sorghum grains formulations were made to find the ratio with the highest nutrient content and lowest antinutrient levels. The 90% amaranth‐sorghum grains formulation had significantly (F = 32.133, P < 0.05) higher energy (5 kcal per g on dry weight basis) than the other formulations and a protein content of 14.4%. This is higher than the estimated protein needs from complementary foods even for a 12–23 months child of low breast milk intake (9.1 g/d). Antinutrients could not be detected which could imply enhanced nutrient bioavailability. Therefore, a nutrient‐dense complementary food product was developed from steeped and germinated amaranth and sorghum grains with 90% amaranth grain. In ready to eat form, it would give an energy content of 1.7 kcal per g (dilution of 1:2 amaranth‐sorghum flour to water) and 1.2 kcal per g (dilution of 1:4 amaranth‐sorghum flour to water). It can be used as a nutrient‐dense complementary food and for other vulnerable groups.
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spelling pubmed-52178732017-01-09 Development of a nutrient‐dense complementary food using amaranth‐sorghum grains Okoth, Judith Kanensi Ochola, Sophie Atieno Gikonyo, Nicholas K. Makokha, Anselimo Food Sci Nutr Original Research Thin porridge from cereals and starchy tubers is a common complementary food in Sub Saharan Africa. It may be high in antinutrients, low in energy, and nutrient density hence inadequate in providing infants' high energy and nutrients requirements per unit body weight. Consequently, undernourishment levels among children under 5 years are high. Therefore, there is need to avail nutrient‐dense complementary foods especially for children in low‐resource settings. The study was aimed at developing a nutrient‐dense complementary food from amaranth and sorghum grains. Amaranth grain, a pseudocereal, though rarely used as a complementary food in Kenya has a higher nutritional quality than other staples. Plant‐based foods are known to have high levels of antinutrients. Steeping and germination were used to reduce the levels of antinutrients and enhance the bioavailability of minerals in the grains. Various steeped and germinated amaranth and sorghum grains formulations were made to find the ratio with the highest nutrient content and lowest antinutrient levels. The 90% amaranth‐sorghum grains formulation had significantly (F = 32.133, P < 0.05) higher energy (5 kcal per g on dry weight basis) than the other formulations and a protein content of 14.4%. This is higher than the estimated protein needs from complementary foods even for a 12–23 months child of low breast milk intake (9.1 g/d). Antinutrients could not be detected which could imply enhanced nutrient bioavailability. Therefore, a nutrient‐dense complementary food product was developed from steeped and germinated amaranth and sorghum grains with 90% amaranth grain. In ready to eat form, it would give an energy content of 1.7 kcal per g (dilution of 1:2 amaranth‐sorghum flour to water) and 1.2 kcal per g (dilution of 1:4 amaranth‐sorghum flour to water). It can be used as a nutrient‐dense complementary food and for other vulnerable groups. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016-04-22 /pmc/articles/PMC5217873/ /pubmed/28070319 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.367 Text en © 2016 The Authors. Food Science & Nutrition published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Okoth, Judith Kanensi
Ochola, Sophie Atieno
Gikonyo, Nicholas K.
Makokha, Anselimo
Development of a nutrient‐dense complementary food using amaranth‐sorghum grains
title Development of a nutrient‐dense complementary food using amaranth‐sorghum grains
title_full Development of a nutrient‐dense complementary food using amaranth‐sorghum grains
title_fullStr Development of a nutrient‐dense complementary food using amaranth‐sorghum grains
title_full_unstemmed Development of a nutrient‐dense complementary food using amaranth‐sorghum grains
title_short Development of a nutrient‐dense complementary food using amaranth‐sorghum grains
title_sort development of a nutrient‐dense complementary food using amaranth‐sorghum grains
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5217873/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28070319
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.367
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