Issue 9, 2015

Novel fiber-rich lentil flours as snack-type functional foods: an extrusion cooking effect on bioactive compounds

Abstract

Novel snack-type functional foods based on extruded lentil flours could convey the related health benefit of their bioactive compounds, provide a gluten-free alternative to consumers, and potentially increase the consumption of pulses. Extrusion treatment promoted an increase in galactopinitol, ciceritol, raffinose, stachyose and total α-galactoside content, in most lentil flours. As α-galactosides may act as prebiotics, they could convey beneficial effects to human and monogastric animals. Conversely, extrusion significantly (p < 0.05) reduced the inositol hexaphosphate content to less phosphorylated phytates (inositol pentaphosphate and inositol tetraphosphate), which provide health effects. The gluten-free formulation (control formulation #3) presented the highest significant (p < 0.05) drop in the inositol hexaphosphate of 14.7-fold decrease, but had a large increase in inositol pentaphosphate, due to extrusion processing. These two results are desirable in the finished product. Extrusion also caused a significant (p < 0.05) reduction in the trypsin content and completely inactivated lectin, in all processed samples.

Graphical abstract: Novel fiber-rich lentil flours as snack-type functional foods: an extrusion cooking effect on bioactive compounds

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Jun 2015
Accepted
13 Jul 2015
First published
29 Jul 2015

Food Funct., 2015,6, 3135-3143

Author version available

Novel fiber-rich lentil flours as snack-type functional foods: an extrusion cooking effect on bioactive compounds

P. Morales, J. D. J. Berrios, A. Varela, C. Burbano, C. Cuadrado, M. Muzquiz and M. M. Pedrosa, Food Funct., 2015, 6, 3135 DOI: 10.1039/C5FO00729A

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