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Fatty acids, mineral composition ond functional (bread and chapati) properties of high protein and high lysine barley lines
Author(s) -
Anjum Faqir M,
Ali A,
Chaudhry Niaz M
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
journal of the science of food and agriculture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.782
H-Index - 142
eISSN - 1097-0010
pISSN - 0022-5142
DOI - 10.1002/jsfa.2740550403
Subject(s) - food science , chemistry , farinograph , wheat flour , composition (language) , fatty acid , palmitic acid , stearic acid , barley flour , myristic acid , biochemistry , philosophy , linguistics , organic chemistry
Abstract Six barley lines derived from corsses involving Hiproly (SV 73608×Mona 5 ) and Riso 1508 with higher yield recipients V 43‐42 and V 5681, along with the four parents, were analyzed for faty acids and mineral composition. Dough properties, bread and chapaties were charcterized by blending barley line (B82503) at 2.5‐25% with bread wheat flour (pak 81). Fatty acid contents were myristic acid, 0.60‐1.16%; palmitic acid, 16.68‐20.84%; stearic acid, 1.30‐3.33% and degree of unsaturation 1.40‐1.50%. The derived lines contained similar amounts of essential fatty acids. Significant variation for magnesium, copper, zinc, phosphorus and potassium was observed but overlapped among the lines and parents. The calciu, iron, and manganese showed non‐significant differences among lines and parents. Blending up to 10% barley flour with bread wheat flour gave farinograph characteristics comparable to those of pure wheat flour, but increasing the proportion of barley beyond this decreased the mix time and dough stability. Breadbaking tests verfied that up to 10% barley could be mixed with wheat without adversely affecting loaf volume and other quality attributes. For chapati making up to 20% barley could be blended into the wheat, yet yield acceptable quality.