Effects of extrusion cooking on the nutritional quality of puffed snacks made from blends of barley and green lentil flours
Özet
Increasing demand for nutritionally dense foods warrants the investigation of high fber and protein ingredients in snack
food applications. In this study, blends of barley (22.9% dietary fber, db) and green lentil (26.4% protein, db) fours were
extruded at fve blending ratios (barley: green lentil, 100: 0, 75: 25, 60: 40, 45: 55, 0: 100, db), two barrel temperature profles
(60–130 °C and 70–140 °C from feeder to die) and three feed moisture contents (15, 18 and 21%) to produce pufed snacks.
Extrusion signifcantly improved in vitro protein digestibility (IVPD) of all blends by up to 10%. Decreasing feed moisture
and increasing die temperature improved IVPD. Blending increased the limiting amino acid score and hence improved the
in vitro protein digestibility corrected amino acid score (IVPDCAAS) of extrudates. On average, the blend 45:55 showed
the highest average IVPDCAAS (68.62%) among the blends studied and lower glycemic index scores compared to the blend
60: 40. In general, extrusion did not substantially afect the soluble, insoluble or total dietary fber contents of the blends.
All extrudates from blends 60: 40 and 45:55 met the requirement to be labelled as “good source of dietary fber” in the US.