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Effect of rice variety and blending proportion on the proximate compositions, minerals and phytic acid contents of bread from rice-teff blend

Development of bakery products containing rice ( Oryza sativa, Linn.) and teff ( Eragrostis tef) could have potential health benefits due to their gluten free nature. Nine experimental runs were generated using custom design by JMP 8 software. The effect of two factors, rice variety (Edeget, X-jigna...

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Autores principales: Legesse, Sintayehu, Worku, Solomon, Bultosa, Geremew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: F1000 Research Limited 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6758841/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31583076
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.6201.1
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author Legesse, Sintayehu
Worku, Solomon
Bultosa, Geremew
author_facet Legesse, Sintayehu
Worku, Solomon
Bultosa, Geremew
author_sort Legesse, Sintayehu
collection PubMed
description Development of bakery products containing rice ( Oryza sativa, Linn.) and teff ( Eragrostis tef) could have potential health benefits due to their gluten free nature. Nine experimental runs were generated using custom design by JMP 8 software. The effect of two factors, rice variety (Edeget, X-jigna and Nerica-4) and blending proportions of rice and teff (0.5:0.5, 0.7:0.3 and 0.9:0.1) were studied. The data analysis was conducted using SAS software package for the mean comparison and custom design by JMP 8 software. Response surface methodology was applied to study the interaction effect of the main factors and to generate the predictive equations. An optimal value (1.60%) of fiber was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 50% Edeget and 50% teff because teff grain is high in fiber. A maximum value (10.75%) of protein was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 70% Nerica-4 and 30% teff. Carbohydrate was optimal (81.37%) when 90% Edeget and 10% teff were blended because rice grain is high in carbohydrate. Optimal iron content (12.97 mg/100g) was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 50% Nerica-4 and 50% teff because teff grain is high in iron. Optimal zinc content (4.14 mg/100g) was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 50% X-jigna and 50% teff. The optimal value (61.25 mg/100g) of calcium was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 50% Edeget and 50% teff.  Optimum (lower) value (0.31mg/g) of phytic acid was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 90% Nerica-4 and 10% teff because rice grain is lower in phytic acid content. It was concluded that rice variety and rice-teff blending proportion had a significant effect on the physico-chemical properties of rice-teff blend bread. An optimal nutrient blend (high in nutrients, low in anti-nutrients) was obtained when 70% Edeget rice variety was blended with 30% teff. All the derived mathematical models for the various responses were found to fit significantly to the predicted data.
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spelling pubmed-67588412019-10-02 Effect of rice variety and blending proportion on the proximate compositions, minerals and phytic acid contents of bread from rice-teff blend Legesse, Sintayehu Worku, Solomon Bultosa, Geremew F1000Res Research Article Development of bakery products containing rice ( Oryza sativa, Linn.) and teff ( Eragrostis tef) could have potential health benefits due to their gluten free nature. Nine experimental runs were generated using custom design by JMP 8 software. The effect of two factors, rice variety (Edeget, X-jigna and Nerica-4) and blending proportions of rice and teff (0.5:0.5, 0.7:0.3 and 0.9:0.1) were studied. The data analysis was conducted using SAS software package for the mean comparison and custom design by JMP 8 software. Response surface methodology was applied to study the interaction effect of the main factors and to generate the predictive equations. An optimal value (1.60%) of fiber was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 50% Edeget and 50% teff because teff grain is high in fiber. A maximum value (10.75%) of protein was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 70% Nerica-4 and 30% teff. Carbohydrate was optimal (81.37%) when 90% Edeget and 10% teff were blended because rice grain is high in carbohydrate. Optimal iron content (12.97 mg/100g) was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 50% Nerica-4 and 50% teff because teff grain is high in iron. Optimal zinc content (4.14 mg/100g) was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 50% X-jigna and 50% teff. The optimal value (61.25 mg/100g) of calcium was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 50% Edeget and 50% teff.  Optimum (lower) value (0.31mg/g) of phytic acid was obtained when the proportion of the blend was 90% Nerica-4 and 10% teff because rice grain is lower in phytic acid content. It was concluded that rice variety and rice-teff blending proportion had a significant effect on the physico-chemical properties of rice-teff blend bread. An optimal nutrient blend (high in nutrients, low in anti-nutrients) was obtained when 70% Edeget rice variety was blended with 30% teff. All the derived mathematical models for the various responses were found to fit significantly to the predicted data. F1000 Research Limited 2015-05-13 /pmc/articles/PMC6758841/ /pubmed/31583076 http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.6201.1 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Legesse S et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Legesse, Sintayehu
Worku, Solomon
Bultosa, Geremew
Effect of rice variety and blending proportion on the proximate compositions, minerals and phytic acid contents of bread from rice-teff blend
title Effect of rice variety and blending proportion on the proximate compositions, minerals and phytic acid contents of bread from rice-teff blend
title_full Effect of rice variety and blending proportion on the proximate compositions, minerals and phytic acid contents of bread from rice-teff blend
title_fullStr Effect of rice variety and blending proportion on the proximate compositions, minerals and phytic acid contents of bread from rice-teff blend
title_full_unstemmed Effect of rice variety and blending proportion on the proximate compositions, minerals and phytic acid contents of bread from rice-teff blend
title_short Effect of rice variety and blending proportion on the proximate compositions, minerals and phytic acid contents of bread from rice-teff blend
title_sort effect of rice variety and blending proportion on the proximate compositions, minerals and phytic acid contents of bread from rice-teff blend
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6758841/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31583076
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.6201.1
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