Bread Products from Blends of African Climate Resilient Crops : Baking Quality, Sensory Profile and Consumers’ Perception

With food insecurity rising dramatically in Sub-Saharan Africa, promoting the use of sorghum, cowpea and cassava flours in staple food such as bread may reduce wheat imports and stimulate the local economy through new value chains. However, studies addressing the technological functionality of blends of these crops and the sensory properties of the obtained breads are scarce. In this study, cowpea varieties (i.e., Glenda and Bechuana), dry-heating of cowpea flour and cowpea to sorghum ratio were studied for their effects on the physical and sensory properties of breads made from flour blends. Increasing cowpea Glenda flour addition from 9 to 27% (in place of sorghum) significantly improved bread specific volume and crumb texture in terms of instrumental hardness and cohesiveness. These improvements were explained by higher water binding, starch gelatinization temperatures and starch granule integrity during pasting of cowpea compared to sorghum and cassava. Differences in physicochemical properties among cowpea flours did not significantly affect bread properties and texture sensory attributes. However, cowpea variety and dry-heating significantly affected flavour attributes (i.e., beany, yeasty and ryebread). Consumer tests indicated that composite breads could be significantly distinguished for most of the sensory attributes compared to commercial wholemeal wheat bread. Nevertheless, the majority of consumers scored the composite breads from neutral to positive with regard to liking. Using these composite doughs, chapati were produced in Uganda by street vendors and tin breads by local bakeries, demonstrating the practical relevance of the study and the potential impact for the local situation. Overall, this study shows that sorghum, cowpea and cassava flour blends can be used for commercial bread-type applications instead of wheat in Sub-Saharan Africa.

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Main Authors: Renzetti, Stefano, Aisala, Heikki, Ngadze, Ruth T., Linnemann, Anita R., Noort, Martijn W.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:bread, cassava, cowpea, food security, sensory, sorghum,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/bread-products-from-blends-of-african-climate-resilient-crops-bak
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6121642025-01-02 Renzetti, Stefano Aisala, Heikki Ngadze, Ruth T. Linnemann, Anita R. Noort, Martijn W. Article/Letter to editor Foods 12 (2023) 4 ISSN: 2304-8158 Bread Products from Blends of African Climate Resilient Crops : Baking Quality, Sensory Profile and Consumers’ Perception 2023 With food insecurity rising dramatically in Sub-Saharan Africa, promoting the use of sorghum, cowpea and cassava flours in staple food such as bread may reduce wheat imports and stimulate the local economy through new value chains. However, studies addressing the technological functionality of blends of these crops and the sensory properties of the obtained breads are scarce. In this study, cowpea varieties (i.e., Glenda and Bechuana), dry-heating of cowpea flour and cowpea to sorghum ratio were studied for their effects on the physical and sensory properties of breads made from flour blends. Increasing cowpea Glenda flour addition from 9 to 27% (in place of sorghum) significantly improved bread specific volume and crumb texture in terms of instrumental hardness and cohesiveness. These improvements were explained by higher water binding, starch gelatinization temperatures and starch granule integrity during pasting of cowpea compared to sorghum and cassava. Differences in physicochemical properties among cowpea flours did not significantly affect bread properties and texture sensory attributes. However, cowpea variety and dry-heating significantly affected flavour attributes (i.e., beany, yeasty and ryebread). Consumer tests indicated that composite breads could be significantly distinguished for most of the sensory attributes compared to commercial wholemeal wheat bread. Nevertheless, the majority of consumers scored the composite breads from neutral to positive with regard to liking. Using these composite doughs, chapati were produced in Uganda by street vendors and tin breads by local bakeries, demonstrating the practical relevance of the study and the potential impact for the local situation. Overall, this study shows that sorghum, cowpea and cassava flour blends can be used for commercial bread-type applications instead of wheat in Sub-Saharan Africa. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/bread-products-from-blends-of-african-climate-resilient-crops-bak 10.3390/foods12040689 https://edepot.wur.nl/589655 bread cassava cowpea food security sensory sorghum https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
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databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic bread
cassava
cowpea
food security
sensory
sorghum
bread
cassava
cowpea
food security
sensory
sorghum
spellingShingle bread
cassava
cowpea
food security
sensory
sorghum
bread
cassava
cowpea
food security
sensory
sorghum
Renzetti, Stefano
Aisala, Heikki
Ngadze, Ruth T.
Linnemann, Anita R.
Noort, Martijn W.
Bread Products from Blends of African Climate Resilient Crops : Baking Quality, Sensory Profile and Consumers’ Perception
description With food insecurity rising dramatically in Sub-Saharan Africa, promoting the use of sorghum, cowpea and cassava flours in staple food such as bread may reduce wheat imports and stimulate the local economy through new value chains. However, studies addressing the technological functionality of blends of these crops and the sensory properties of the obtained breads are scarce. In this study, cowpea varieties (i.e., Glenda and Bechuana), dry-heating of cowpea flour and cowpea to sorghum ratio were studied for their effects on the physical and sensory properties of breads made from flour blends. Increasing cowpea Glenda flour addition from 9 to 27% (in place of sorghum) significantly improved bread specific volume and crumb texture in terms of instrumental hardness and cohesiveness. These improvements were explained by higher water binding, starch gelatinization temperatures and starch granule integrity during pasting of cowpea compared to sorghum and cassava. Differences in physicochemical properties among cowpea flours did not significantly affect bread properties and texture sensory attributes. However, cowpea variety and dry-heating significantly affected flavour attributes (i.e., beany, yeasty and ryebread). Consumer tests indicated that composite breads could be significantly distinguished for most of the sensory attributes compared to commercial wholemeal wheat bread. Nevertheless, the majority of consumers scored the composite breads from neutral to positive with regard to liking. Using these composite doughs, chapati were produced in Uganda by street vendors and tin breads by local bakeries, demonstrating the practical relevance of the study and the potential impact for the local situation. Overall, this study shows that sorghum, cowpea and cassava flour blends can be used for commercial bread-type applications instead of wheat in Sub-Saharan Africa.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet bread
cassava
cowpea
food security
sensory
sorghum
author Renzetti, Stefano
Aisala, Heikki
Ngadze, Ruth T.
Linnemann, Anita R.
Noort, Martijn W.
author_facet Renzetti, Stefano
Aisala, Heikki
Ngadze, Ruth T.
Linnemann, Anita R.
Noort, Martijn W.
author_sort Renzetti, Stefano
title Bread Products from Blends of African Climate Resilient Crops : Baking Quality, Sensory Profile and Consumers’ Perception
title_short Bread Products from Blends of African Climate Resilient Crops : Baking Quality, Sensory Profile and Consumers’ Perception
title_full Bread Products from Blends of African Climate Resilient Crops : Baking Quality, Sensory Profile and Consumers’ Perception
title_fullStr Bread Products from Blends of African Climate Resilient Crops : Baking Quality, Sensory Profile and Consumers’ Perception
title_full_unstemmed Bread Products from Blends of African Climate Resilient Crops : Baking Quality, Sensory Profile and Consumers’ Perception
title_sort bread products from blends of african climate resilient crops : baking quality, sensory profile and consumers’ perception
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/bread-products-from-blends-of-african-climate-resilient-crops-bak
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