Study of the Technological Properties of Pedrosillano Chickpea Aquafaba and Its Application in the Production of Egg-Free Baked Meringues
Paula Fuentes Choya, Patricia Combarros‐Fuertes, Daniel Abarquero, Erica Renes, Bernardo Prieto Gutiérrez, María Eugenia Tornadijo Rodríguez +1 more
Foods
Abstract
Aquafaba is a by-product derived from legume processing. The aim of this study was to assess the compositional differences and the culinary properties of <i>Pedrosillano</i> chickpea aquafaba prepared with different cooking liquids (water, vegetable broth, meat broth and the covering liquid of canned chickpeas) and to evaluate the sensory characteristics of French-baked meringues made with the different aquafaba samples, using egg white as a control. The content of total solids, protein, fat, ash and carbohydrates of the aquafaba samples were quantified. Foaming and emulsifying capacities, as well as the foam and emulsions stabilities were determined. Instrumental and panel-tester analyses were accomplished to evaluate the sensory characteristics of French-baked meringues. The ingredients added to the cooking liquid and the intensity of the heat treatment affected the aquafaba composition and culinary properties. All types of aquafaba showed good foaming properties and intermediate emulsifying capacities; however, the commercial canned chickpea's aquafaba was the most similar to egg white. The aquafaba meringues showed less alveoli, greater hardness and fracturability and minimal color changes after baking compared with egg white meringues; the meat and vegetable broth's aquafaba meringues were the lowest rated by the panel-tester and those prepared with canned aquafaba were the highest scored in the sensory analysis.
Extracted Claims
4 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
Meat and vegetable broth's aquafaba meringues were the lowest rated by the panel-tester
“the meat and vegetable broth's aquafaba meringues were the lowest rated by the panel-tester”
Aquafaba showed good foaming properties and intermediate emulsifying capacities
“All types of aquafaba showed good foaming properties and intermediate emulsifying capacities; however, the commercial canned chickpea's aquafaba was the most similar to egg white.”
Aquafaba meringues showed less alveoli, greater hardness and fracturability and minimal color changes after baking compared with egg white meringues
“The aquafaba meringues showed less alveoli, greater hardness and fracturability and minimal color changes after baking compared with egg white meringues.”