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Extruded products with Fenugreek (Trigonella foenum-graecium) chickpea and rice: Physical properties, sensory acceptability and glycaemic index

journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by Shirani GamlathShirani Gamlath, G Ravindran
The present study investigated the effects of fenugreek flour (<i>Trigonella foenum-graecum</i>) and debittered fenugreek polysaccharide (FenuLife<sup>®</sup>) inclusion on the physical and sensory quality characteristics, and glycaemic index (GI) of chickpea–rice based extruded products. Based on preliminary evaluation with different proportions of chick pea and rice, a blend of 70:30 chickpea and rice was chosen as the control for further studies. The control blend, replaced with fenugreek flour at 2%, 5% and 10%, or fenugreek polysaccharide at 5%, 10%, 15% and 20%, was extruded at the optimum processing conditions as specified in the detailed study. The extruded products were evaluated for their physical (moisture retention, expansion, hardness, water solubility index (WSI) and water absorption index (WAI)), sensory (flavor, texture, color and overall acceptability) characteristics and in vitro GI to evaluate their suitability as extruded snack products.<br><br>Due to the distinct bitter taste, inclusion of fenugreek flour was not acceptable at levels more than 2% in extruded chickpea based products. Addition of fenugreek polysaccharide resulted in slight reduction in radial expansion (<i>P</i> < 0.05), while longitudinal expansion increased. WAI increased while WSI decreased compared to the control (<i>P </i>< 0.05). The mean scores of sensory evaluation indicated that all products containing fenugreek polysaccharide up to 15% were within the acceptable range. There were no significant differences (<i>P</i> > 0.05) between products containing 5–15% fenugreek polysaccharide in their color, flavor, texture and overall quality.<br><br>Fenugreek, in the form of debittered polysaccharide (FenuLife<sup>®</sup>) could be incorporated up to a level of 15% in a chickpea–rice blend to develop snack products of acceptable physical and sensory properties with low GI Index.<br>

History

Related Materials

Location

London, England

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, Elsevier Ltd

Journal

Journal of food engineering

Volume

90

Pagination

44 - 52

ISSN

0260-8774

eISSN

1873-5770