Wheat ( <i>Triticum aestivum</i> L. and <i>T. turgidum</i> L. ssp. <i>durum</i> ) Kernel Hardness: II. Implications for End‐Product Quality and Role of Puroindolines Therein
Anneleen Pauly, Bram Pareyt, Ellen Fierens, Jan A. Delcour
Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
Abstract
Wheat kernel hardness is a major quality characteristic used in classifying wheat cultivars. Differences in endosperm texture among Triticum aestivum L. or between T. aestivum and T. turgidum L. ssp. durum cultivars profoundly affect their milling behavior, the properties of the obtained flour or semolina particles, as well as the quality of products made thereof. It is now widely accepted that the presence, sequence polymorphism, or absence of the basic and cysteine-rich puroindolines a and b are responsible for differences in endosperm texture. These proteins show features in vitro, including foaming and lipid-binding properties, which provide them with a potential impact in the production of wheat-based food products, where they may improve gas cell stabilization or modulate interactions between starch, proteins, and/or lipids. We here summarize the impact of wheat hardness on milling properties and bread, cookie, cake, and pasta quality and discuss the role of puroindolines therein.
Extracted Claims
5 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
puroindolines a and b impact gas cell stabilization and interactions between starch, proteins, and/or lipids
“These proteins show features in vitro, including foaming and lipid-binding properties, which provide them with a potential impact in the production of wheat-based food products, where they may improve...”
wheat hardness affects milling properties and bread, cookie, cake, and pasta quality
“We here summarize the impact of wheat hardness on milling properties and bread, cookie, cake, and pasta quality and discuss the role of puroindolines therein”
puroindolines a and b show foaming and lipid-binding properties
“These proteins show features in vitro, including foaming and lipid-binding properties”