545 research outputs found
Lentil fortified spaghetti: Technological properties and nutritional characterization
Lentil (Lens culinaris), consumed as a part of the diet worldwide, is a functional dietary ingredient that plays a function in human nutrition as a rich source of bioactive nutrients (low quantities of fat, sodium, and vitamin K; high content of potassium, essential amino acids, insoluble dietary fiber, and polyphenols). In this study spaghetti fortified with lentil flours (40% w/w) were developed and characterized. The addition of two different lentil flours significantly affected the sensory attributes and cooking properties of dry spaghetti. Therefore, the addition of carboxymethyl cellulose was adopted as technological option to improve the quality of fortified pasta; specifically, sensory acceptability, cooking loss, swelling index, and water absorption were studied. Chemical results highlighted that the addition of lentil to semolina significantly increased the content of lysine and threonine. It was observed an increase in essential and branched-chain amino acids. Contrary to what was expected, no increase in mono and polyunsaturated fatty acids was observed in fortified spaghetti, due to their loss during cooking, even after the addition of carboxymethyl cellulose
Shelf life of Stracciatella cheese under modified-atmosphere packaging
The aim of this work is to evaluate the shelf life of Stracciatella cheese packaged in a protective atmosphere, using 4 different CO(2):N(2):O(2) gas mixtures [50:50:0 (M1), 95:5:0 (M2), 75:25:0 (M3), and 30:65:5 (M4) vol/vol] and stored at 8 degrees C. Cheese in traditional tubs and under vacuum were used as the controls. Results showed that the modified-atmosphere packaging, in particular M1 and M2, delayed microbial growth of spoilage bacteria, without affecting the dairy microflora, and prolonged the sensorial acceptability limit
A new nanocomposite packaging based on lasis-generated agnps for the preservation of apple juice
Designing bioactive materials, with controlled metal ion release, exerting a significant biological action and associated to low toxicity for humans, is nowadays one of the most important challenges for our community. The most looked-for nanoantimicrobials are capable of releasing metal species with defined kinetic profiles, either by slowing down or inhibiting bacterial growth and pathogenic microorganism diffusion. In this study, laser ablation synthesis in solution (LASiS) has been used to produce bioactive Ag-based nanocolloids, in isopropyl alcohol, which can be used as water-insoluble nano-reservoirs in composite materials like poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate). Infrared spectroscopy was used to evaluate the chemical state of pristine polymer and final composite material, thus providing useful information about synthesis processes, as well as storage and processing conditions. Transmission electron microscopy was exploited to study the morphology of nano-colloids, along with UV-Vis for bulk chemical characterization, highlighting the presence of spheroidal particles with average diameter around 12 nm. Electro-thermal atomic absorption spectroscopy was used to investigate metal ion release from Ag-modified products, showing a maximum release around 60 ppb, which ensures an efficient antimicrobial activity, being much lower than what recommended by health institutions. Analytical spectroscopy results were matched with bioactivity tests carried out on target microorganisms of food spoilage
Manufacture and characterization of gluten-free spaghetti enriched with vegetable flour
The manufacture and characterization of gluten-free spaghetti based on maize flour and different vegetable
flours (artichoke, asparagus, pumpkin, zucchini, tomato, yellow pepper, red pepper, green pepper,
carrot, broccoli, spinach, eggplant and fennel) were addressed in this study. The screening of the vegetable
flours showed that homogeneity, color, fibrous, taste and odor were the parameters that have
most influenced the overall quality of the dry spaghetti. The spaghetti added with yellow pepper flour
was chosen for further analysis because of its highest sensory quality; in contrast, it recorded low carotenoids
content due to the high temperature of the drying process (cycle named as HTDC). Therefore,
an optimization of the drying cycle was performed (lower temperature) on the yellow pepper flour (cycle
named as LTDC) that resulted in an increase of the carotenoids content. Although the spaghetti with low
temperature yellow pepper flour had a higher cooking loss and lower instrumental hardness when
compared to the spaghetti made with only maize flour (CTRL) it however had a significantly higher
protein and dietary fiber content. Moreover there was no significant difference in the amount of glucose
released during in vitro digestion for this spaghetti sample with respect to the CTRL sample
New Approach to Enrich Pasta with Polyphenols from Grape Marc
Food industry produces significant amount of waste that represents a problem for the sector. However, by-products are also promising sources of compounds which may be reused for their nutritional properties. The aim of this work is to exploit winemaking by-products, obtaining an extract by ultrasound-assisted extraction only using water as solvent. The characteristics of spaghetti enriched with grape marc were assessed and compared to control samples. In particular, total phenolic and flavonoids contents, the antioxidant activity, the cooking quality, and the sensory acceptability were evaluated at various steps of pasta production. The enriched spaghetti showed higher total phenolic and flavonoids contents and higher antioxidant activity than the control pasta. In addition, low cooking losses were found. In terms of sensory properties fortified pasta is acceptable as the traditional product, thus demonstrating that it is possible to exploit food waste to better satisfy consumer demand for healthy food products in a more sustainable perspective
Effect of Fiber Information on Consumer's Expectation and Liking of Wheat Bran Enriched Pasta
The need to promote a diet rich in wholegrain has been recognized as an important task in nutrition education. Despite this, the intake of fiber in Western countries is below the recommended 25 g per day. The aim of the study was to evaluate the impact of wheat bran addition on the sensory quality of durum wheat spaghetti and to evaluate the effect of fiber information on consumer's acceptability and expectation. Information about fiber content had a positive impact on consumer's expected product quality but only for bran addition equal or higher than 20%. Consumers completely assimilated their liking in the direction of expectations for spaghetti with 20 and 25% of bran addition. Assimilation was incomplete for the 30% added sample indicating that the health benefit of eating fiber did not compensate the decrease in liking. The effect of information varied according to consumers' frequency consumption of bran-enriched pasta. Non-users showed a negative disconfirmation starting with a 20% bran addition, whereas for low-and high-users disconfirmation occurred at a higher bran addition. A complete assimilation effect was seen only for non-users, indicating that fiber information had an impact only for those consumers who actually do not consume wholegrain pasta
Recipe Optimization to Produce Functional Food Based on Meat and Fish
Functional foods were produced from the combination of minced meat or fish with extra virgin olive oil and
vegetable flour. Proper concentrations of oil and vegetable flours were selected to improve the nutritional properties
of processed meat and fish burgers. Sensory evaluations were also carried out in different sessions by trained
panel and generic consumers to assess product acceptability. The results of the work demonstrated that the two
ingredients, selected for their well-known healthy benefits, enhance not only the nutritional value but also the sensory
properties of food. In particular, the best formulation for meat patties contained 10% oil and 10% red pepper flour,
whereas, 15% oil and 5% yellow pepper flour and 17.5% oil and 7.5% zucchini flour were the optimized ingredients
for fish burgers. These recipes did not score significantly different from other CCD options but were preferred by
consumers, when asked to compare these new products to traditional burgers. Moreover, analytical investigations
carried out before and after cooking assessed the preservation of the health-giving compounds deriving from the
pepper flour
On the Importance of Electroweak Corrections for Majorana Dark Matter Indirect Detection
Recent analyses have shown that the inclusion of electroweak corrections can
alter significantly the energy spectra of Standard Model particles originated
from dark matter annihilations. We investigate the important situation where
the radiation of electroweak gauge bosons has a substantial influence: a
Majorana dark matter particle annihilating into two light fermions. This
process is in p-wave and hence suppressed by the small value of the relative
velocity of the annihilating particles. The inclusion of electroweak radiation
eludes this suppression and opens up a potentially sizeable s-wave contribution
to the annihilation cross section. We study this effect in detail and explore
its impact on the fluxes of stable particles resulting from the dark matter
annihilations, which are relevant for dark matter indirect searches. We also
discuss the effective field theory approach, pointing out that the opening of
the s-wave is missed at the level of dimension-six operators and only encoded
by higher orders.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures. Minor corrections to match version published in
JCA
Anthropic solution to the magnetic muon anomaly: the charged see-saw
We present models of new physics that can explain the muon g-2 anomaly in
accord with with the assumption that the only scalar existing at the weak scale
is the Higgs, as suggested by anthropic selection. Such models are dubbed
"charged see-saw" because the muon mass term is mediated by heavy leptons. The
electroweak contribution to the g-2 gets modified by order one factors, giving
an anomaly of the same order as the observed hint, which is strongly correlated
with a modification of the Higgs coupling to the muon.Comment: 21 pages, many equations despite the first word in the title. v3:
loop function G_WN corrected, conclusions unchange
Simulated Milky Way analogues: implications for dark matter direct searches
We study the implications of galaxy formation on dark matter direct detection using high resolution hydrodynamic simulations of Milky Way-like galaxies simulated within the eagle and apostle projects. We identify MilkyWay analogues that satisfy observational constraints on the Milky Way rotation curve and total stellar mass. We then extract the dark matter density and velocity distribution in the Solar neighbourhood for this set of Milky Way analogues, and use them to analyse the results of current direct detection experiments. For most Milky Way analogues, the event rates in direct detection experiments obtained from the best _t Maxwellian distribution (with peak speed of 223 { 289 km=s) are similar to those obtained directly from the simulations. As a consequence, the allowed regions and exclusion limits set by direct detection experiments in the dark matter mass and spin-independent cross section plane shift by a few GeV compared to the Standard Halo Model, at low dark matter masses. For each dark matter mass, the halo-to-halo variation of the local dark matter density results in an overall shift of the allowed regions and exclusion limits for the cross section. However, the compatibility of the possible hints for a dark matter signal from
DAMA and CDMS-Si and null results from LUX and SuperCDMS is not improved
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