Cargando…

Extrusion Cooking Effect on Carbohydrate Fraction in Novel Gluten-Free Flours Based on Chickpea and Rice

Extrusion cooking allows the development of value-added products from pulses, such as gluten-free snacks with added functional properties. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the changes induced by the extrusion process on the carbohydrate fraction (total carbohydrates, soluble sugars a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ciudad-Mulero, María, Vega, Erika N., García-Herrera, Patricia, Pedrosa, Mercedes M., Arribas, Claudia, Berrios, José De J., Cámara, Montaña, Fernández-Ruiz, Virginia, Morales, Patricia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8838332/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35164408
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27031143
_version_ 1784650101482848256
author Ciudad-Mulero, María
Vega, Erika N.
García-Herrera, Patricia
Pedrosa, Mercedes M.
Arribas, Claudia
Berrios, José De J.
Cámara, Montaña
Fernández-Ruiz, Virginia
Morales, Patricia
author_facet Ciudad-Mulero, María
Vega, Erika N.
García-Herrera, Patricia
Pedrosa, Mercedes M.
Arribas, Claudia
Berrios, José De J.
Cámara, Montaña
Fernández-Ruiz, Virginia
Morales, Patricia
author_sort Ciudad-Mulero, María
collection PubMed
description Extrusion cooking allows the development of value-added products from pulses, such as gluten-free snacks with added functional properties. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the changes induced by the extrusion process on the carbohydrate fraction (total carbohydrates, soluble sugars and oligosaccharides, dietary fiber, and arabinoxylans) of novel flour formulations based on chickpeas and rice enriched with different dietary fiber sources. Moreover, the influence of the addition of fiber-rich ingredients, such as Fibersol(®) and passion fruit, on the analyzed compounds was also evaluated. Sucrose was the main soluble sugar found in analyzed formulations, and raffinose was the prevalent oligosaccharide, followed by stachyose. The content of total α-galactosides tended to be higher after extrusion cooking. As a consequence of the extrusion treatment, the content of total and soluble dietary fiber was statistically increased in most of the analyzed samples. In general, no significant changes were observed in total arabinoxylan content as a consequence of the extrusion process, while the content of water-soluble arabinoxylans was significantly increased in extruded formulations. It was observed that the content of total available carbohydrates, stachyose, and water-soluble arabinoxylans were significantly influenced by the addition of passion fruit, Fibersol(®), and both. The incorporation of these ingredients in gluten-free formulations based on chickpeas and rice allows one to obtain suitable functional formulations for the development of innovative, gluten-free, extruded snack-type products, which could be an interesting alternative for people with celiac disease.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8838332
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-88383322022-02-13 Extrusion Cooking Effect on Carbohydrate Fraction in Novel Gluten-Free Flours Based on Chickpea and Rice Ciudad-Mulero, María Vega, Erika N. García-Herrera, Patricia Pedrosa, Mercedes M. Arribas, Claudia Berrios, José De J. Cámara, Montaña Fernández-Ruiz, Virginia Morales, Patricia Molecules Article Extrusion cooking allows the development of value-added products from pulses, such as gluten-free snacks with added functional properties. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the changes induced by the extrusion process on the carbohydrate fraction (total carbohydrates, soluble sugars and oligosaccharides, dietary fiber, and arabinoxylans) of novel flour formulations based on chickpeas and rice enriched with different dietary fiber sources. Moreover, the influence of the addition of fiber-rich ingredients, such as Fibersol(®) and passion fruit, on the analyzed compounds was also evaluated. Sucrose was the main soluble sugar found in analyzed formulations, and raffinose was the prevalent oligosaccharide, followed by stachyose. The content of total α-galactosides tended to be higher after extrusion cooking. As a consequence of the extrusion treatment, the content of total and soluble dietary fiber was statistically increased in most of the analyzed samples. In general, no significant changes were observed in total arabinoxylan content as a consequence of the extrusion process, while the content of water-soluble arabinoxylans was significantly increased in extruded formulations. It was observed that the content of total available carbohydrates, stachyose, and water-soluble arabinoxylans were significantly influenced by the addition of passion fruit, Fibersol(®), and both. The incorporation of these ingredients in gluten-free formulations based on chickpeas and rice allows one to obtain suitable functional formulations for the development of innovative, gluten-free, extruded snack-type products, which could be an interesting alternative for people with celiac disease. MDPI 2022-02-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8838332/ /pubmed/35164408 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27031143 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Ciudad-Mulero, María
Vega, Erika N.
García-Herrera, Patricia
Pedrosa, Mercedes M.
Arribas, Claudia
Berrios, José De J.
Cámara, Montaña
Fernández-Ruiz, Virginia
Morales, Patricia
Extrusion Cooking Effect on Carbohydrate Fraction in Novel Gluten-Free Flours Based on Chickpea and Rice
title Extrusion Cooking Effect on Carbohydrate Fraction in Novel Gluten-Free Flours Based on Chickpea and Rice
title_full Extrusion Cooking Effect on Carbohydrate Fraction in Novel Gluten-Free Flours Based on Chickpea and Rice
title_fullStr Extrusion Cooking Effect on Carbohydrate Fraction in Novel Gluten-Free Flours Based on Chickpea and Rice
title_full_unstemmed Extrusion Cooking Effect on Carbohydrate Fraction in Novel Gluten-Free Flours Based on Chickpea and Rice
title_short Extrusion Cooking Effect on Carbohydrate Fraction in Novel Gluten-Free Flours Based on Chickpea and Rice
title_sort extrusion cooking effect on carbohydrate fraction in novel gluten-free flours based on chickpea and rice
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8838332/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35164408
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27031143
work_keys_str_mv AT ciudadmuleromaria extrusioncookingeffectoncarbohydratefractioninnovelglutenfreefloursbasedonchickpeaandrice
AT vegaerikan extrusioncookingeffectoncarbohydratefractioninnovelglutenfreefloursbasedonchickpeaandrice
AT garciaherrerapatricia extrusioncookingeffectoncarbohydratefractioninnovelglutenfreefloursbasedonchickpeaandrice
AT pedrosamercedesm extrusioncookingeffectoncarbohydratefractioninnovelglutenfreefloursbasedonchickpeaandrice
AT arribasclaudia extrusioncookingeffectoncarbohydratefractioninnovelglutenfreefloursbasedonchickpeaandrice
AT berriosjosedej extrusioncookingeffectoncarbohydratefractioninnovelglutenfreefloursbasedonchickpeaandrice
AT camaramontana extrusioncookingeffectoncarbohydratefractioninnovelglutenfreefloursbasedonchickpeaandrice
AT fernandezruizvirginia extrusioncookingeffectoncarbohydratefractioninnovelglutenfreefloursbasedonchickpeaandrice
AT moralespatricia extrusioncookingeffectoncarbohydratefractioninnovelglutenfreefloursbasedonchickpeaandrice