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handle: 10261/336479
Dietary fibre intake has beneficial effects on immunonutritional health and prevents the development of chronic non-communicable diseases such as obesity and diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer. Currently, dietary fibre consumption worldwide is below the WHO recommended daily intake of 25 g. An excellent source of dietary fibre is the fibre-rich fractions of quinoa, which have a high technological potential, nutritional value, and biological activity. This fraction can be isolated via wet-milling, which offers a higher yield and recovery of the main chemical components of cereals/pseudocereals with a higher purity than those obtained via dry-milling. The objective of this work was the isolation of fibre-rich fractions of Royal Bolivian quinoa (white, red, and black) obtained via wet-milling and their characterization as technofunctional ingredients in the formulation of cereal-based food products. The extraction yield of the fibre fraction and its proximal chemical composition were determined, in addition to phytic acid content; minerals such as calcium, iron, and zinc; and technofunctional properties (particle size distribution, water and oil holding capacity, and swelling capacity). All fibre fractions isolated via wet-milling could be used as food ingredients. In particular, the fibre-rich fraction of black quinoa contains the highest amount of insoluble fibre. However, from a technological point of view, red quinoa fibre could be the most suitable for inclusion in the formulation of food matrices due to its high water and oil retention capacity, as well as its swelling capacity. The incorporation of a low proportion of quinoa dietary fibre (5–10%) allows increasing the nutritional profile of cereal-based food products.
This work was supported by grants Ia ValSe-Food-CYTED (Iberoamerican Valuable Seeds—119RT0567) and Food4ImNut (PID2019-107650RB-C21) of the Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN-Spain).
This article belongs to the Proceedings of V International Conference la ValSe-Food and VIII Symposium Chia-Link.
Peer reviewed
QH301-705.5, Quinoa fractionation, QP501-801, Animal biochemistry, Wet-milling, wet-milling, QK900-989, Biology (General), dietary fibre-rich fraction, quinoa fractionation, Plant ecology, Dietary fibre-rich fraction
QH301-705.5, Quinoa fractionation, QP501-801, Animal biochemistry, Wet-milling, wet-milling, QK900-989, Biology (General), dietary fibre-rich fraction, quinoa fractionation, Plant ecology, Dietary fibre-rich fraction
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