Comparative physico-chemical characterization of organic flours from wheat, rye and spelt

Sérgio Sousa, Pedro Castro, Joana Costa, Francisca Casanova Bastos, Ema Dias, Ana Gomes*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to conferenceAbstractpeer-review

Abstract

Aim: There is an increasing consumer demand for healthier food products, such as cereal flours, free from pesticides and other contaminants. The production of organic cereals is therefore a solution that can be commercially explored. Moreover, consumers also highly appreciate and value the local production of cereals and flours. Hence, the aim of the current work was to characterize organic flours obtained from three distinct cereals, namely wheat, rye and spelt. The cereals were selected on the basis that they are able to be grown in Portugal as it presents favourable climatic conditions. Methods: Physico-chemical characteristics of each organic cereal flour, crucial for adequate processing, were analysed through distinct methodologies/technologies, such as falling number (enzyme activity), mastersizer (size distribution) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM; morphology), among several others. Results: Results showed that, among the three flours, wheat presented the highest falling number (350), which translates the enzymatic activity of α-amylase (being negatively correlated). Hence, the dough prepared with wheat flour will be harder than those obtained with the flours from the other cereals. Concerning size distribution of the flours’ granules, results showed bimodal distribution regarding wheat and rye flours, while spelt flour resembled a normal distribution. A maximum (peak) was observed for all flours between 20-30 μm, and a second peak was registered at 60 and 135 μm for wheat and rye, respectively. Those results, obtained utilizing a mastersizer, were further corroborated via SEM analysis. X-ray diffraction analysis provided information concerning cristalographic structure, which allowed to determine that the flour with lower cristalinity was rye. Since this characteristic decreases susceptibility to enzymes, it is inferred that rye flour will be the easiest to digest. Differencial scanning calorimetry (DSC) showed similar starch gelatinization temperature between the three flours, although in spelt flour the process was initialized at lower temperature. Fourier- transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) analysis revealed similar spectra, disclosing, as expected, the presence of starch and gluten. Conclusion: Knowledge on the physico-chemical properties of each particular organic cereal flour is crucial and must be considered when looking to select one to develop a specific food product.
Original languageEnglish
Pages158-158
Number of pages1
Publication statusPublished - 2024
Event38th EFFoST International Conference 2024: Future Food Systems: Innovation through Progress at Scientific Interfaces - Bruges, Belgium
Duration: 12 Nov 202414 Nov 2024

Conference

Conference38th EFFoST International Conference 2024
Abbreviated titleEFFoST 2024
Country/TerritoryBelgium
CityBruges
Period12/11/2414/11/24

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