Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

agricultural and biological sciences

Composition, in vitro digestibility, and sensory evaluation of extruded whole grain sorghum breakfast cereals

LWT, Volume 62, No. 1, Year 2015

Two sorghum genotypes (red, tannin; white, non-tannin), were evaluated for their potential use in breakfast cereals. Two levels of whole grain sorghum flour (550g/kg dry mix or 700g/kg dry mix) were processed per genotype using a pilot-scale, twin screw extruder. A whole grain oat-based cereal was used as a reference. White sorghum cereals (WSC) had significantly (p<0.05) higher starch, brightness (L*), and yellowness (b*) than red sorghum cereals (RSC). RSC had higher protein and bulk density than the WSC. Cereals made with 700g sorghum flour/kg were smaller and denser with lower water solubility and absorption indices than those made with 550g/kg. Invitro protein digestibility of the RSC (43-58%) was significantly reduced compared with the WSC (69-73%) and the reference sample (72%). WSC with 700g sorghum flour/kg contained significantly more resistant starch than the RSC cereals and the oat reference (208g/kg starch versus 81-147g/kg starch, respectively). Overall acceptability and texture of sorghum cereals did not differ significantly from the oat reference, although appearance and aroma liking were significantly reduced. Therefore, non-tannin sorghum has potential to be used in the breakfast cereal industry with minimal impact on nutritional profile and sensory properties.
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Citations: 45
Authors: 5
Affiliations: 3
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Research Areas
Environmental
Genetics And Genomics