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Removal and Isolation of Germ‐Rich Fractions from Hull‐less Barley Using a Fitzpatrick Comminuting Mill and Sieves
Author(s) -
Moreau Robert A.,
Hicks Kevin B.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
cereal chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.558
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1943-3638
pISSN - 0009-0352
DOI - 10.1094/cchem-09-12-0118-r
Subject(s) - germ , chemistry , fraction (chemistry) , germination , fractionation , composition (language) , wheat germ , yield (engineering) , extraction (chemistry) , botany , agronomy , food science , horticulture , chromatography , biology , materials science , linguistics , philosophy , metallurgy , microbiology and biotechnology
A process was developed to produce a germ‐enriched fraction from hull‐less barley using a Fitzpatrick comminuting mill (FitzMilling) followed by sieving. Hulled and hull‐less barleys contain 1.5–2.5% oil and, like wheat kernels, which contain wheat germ oil, much of the oil in barley kernels is in the germ fraction. A process that combined FitzMilling and sieving produced a germ‐enriched fraction with an oil content of ≈15% and a yield of ≈1.1%. For comparison, this is higher than the levels of oil in most samples of commercial wheat germ. Experimental conditions were also described to produce a germ‐enriched fraction with a higher yield (2.16%), but it would have lower oil content (10.24%). Germination and compositional analysis studies suggested that FitzMilling hull‐less barley for 2 min or longer reduced germination rates to 1% or less, which was interpreted to mean that almost the entire viable germ was removed. In contrast, FitzMilling conventional hulled barley for 4 min had no effect on germination, and milling for 6 and 8 min resulted in germination rates of 36 and 12%, respectively. The oil extracted from germ‐enriched fractions was rich in free phytosterols (≈1%), phytosterol esters (3–7%), and free fatty acids (2–10%). These germ‐enriched fractions and the extracted oil they contain may have value as nutraceuticals or premium edible oils.