Consumers acceptance of composite cassava-maize-wheat breads using baking improvers
Author(s) -
Eduardo Maria,
Ulf Svanberg,
Ahrn Lilia,
Emmanuel Oladeji Alamu,
B. MaziyaDixon,
Christian Okonkwo,
Roberts Asiedu
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
african journal of food science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1996-0794
DOI - 10.5897/ajfs2014.1179
Subject(s) - food science , pectin , composite number , wheat bread , chemistry , wheat flour , aroma , flavour , bread making , carboxymethyl cellulose , moisture , mathematics , materials science , composite material , sodium , organic chemistry
A consumer test of composite cassava:maize:wheat (40:10:50) breads prepared with improvers, 0.3% emulsifiers, either as lecithin (LC) or diacetyl tartaric ester of mono-diglycerides (DATEM), and 3% hydrocolloids, either as high-methylated pectin (HM pectin) or carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), was carried out in supermarkets in Mozambique. Overall acceptance and sensory attributes such as appearance, texture, smell, flavour, and crumb and crust colour were evaluated, and the consumption pattern and purchase intent were determined using a structured questionnaire. Composite bread quality characteristics, such as specific volume, crust colour, moisture content and firmness, were assessed instrumentally. The consumers’ overall acceptance of the composite bread with a mixture of roasted and sundried cassava flours and added HM pectin and LC had a score of 7.58, which was slightly higher than 7.28 for the composite bread with roasted cassava flour. The hedonic test showed that the perceived overall quality of the optimized composite bread based on roasted cassava flour with CMC and DATEM had a score of 7.47, which was significantly higher than the corresponding bread with HM pectin and LC (7.01), but not significantly different from commercial wheat bread (7.82). Crust colour and crumb colour and firmness correlated highly with their perceived sensorial counterpart properties.
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