posted on 2021-11-16, 12:17authored byMaría M. Cermeño Aínsa, Maria Dermiki, Thanyaporn Kleekayai, Lydia Cope, Rebecca McManus, Chloe Ryan, Manuel Felix, Cal Flynn, Richard J. Fitzgerald
Brewers’ spent grain (BSG) is the major co-product of the brewing industry having a high content of protein and
fibre. Enzymatic modification improves the properties of different ingredients when they are incorporated into
confectionary products. This study characterised the rheological, textural and sensory properties of unmodified
BSG (BSGA) and enzymatically modified BSG (BSGB, i.e., proteinase and carbohydrase modified BSG) when
substituted at different levels (5, 10 and 15%) in a muffin ingredient mix. Rheological assessment showed a
lower viscosity for the BSGB compared to the BSGA batters. Baked BSGB containing muffins had lower hardness
values compared to BSGA and control without added BSG. Sensory assessment showed no significant differences
in liking of the different attributes tested (overall appearance, texture, smell, colour and taste) between the 5%
BSGA and BSGB supplemented muffins. Incorporation of BSGB at 10% had no negative impact on the sensory
attributes in comparison to BSGA 10%. Overall, low level substitution of enzymatic modified BSG beneficially
reduced batter viscosity and muffin hardness and gave comparable sensory attributes to those of unmodified BSG
supplemented muffins. Therefore, prior enzymatic modification can enhance the ingredient functionality of BSG
in confectionary products.
Funding
"Acoustic-Phonetic Knowledge Representation in a Statistically Based Classifier
Directorate for Computer & Information Science & Engineering