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Fakhreddin Salehi

Fakhreddin Salehi

Academic rank: Associate Professor
ORCID: 0000-0002-6653-860X
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 50262947600
HIndex:
Faculty: Faculty of Food Industry, Bahar
Address: Department of Food Science and Technology, Faculty of Food Industry, Bu-Ali Sina University, Hamedan, Iran
Phone:

Research

Title
Effect of common and new gums on the quality, physical, and textural properties of bakery products: A review
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Guar; Gums; Carrageenan; Methylcellulose; Wild sage seed; Xanthan
Year
2020
Journal JOURNAL OF TEXTURE STUDIES
DOI
Researchers Fakhreddin Salehi

Abstract

Hydrocolloids (gums) have a good functional characteristic such as emulsifying, gelling, solubility, and textural improvement. In the bakery products, hydrocolloids were used to improving dough performance, bread and cake characteristics, sensorial quality, and extension the products shelf life. Several studies reported the potential use of hydrocolloids in breads, biscuits, cakes, and pasta formulation. The present review summarized the effect of the most common and new hydrocolloids (xanthan, guar, Arabic, carrageenan, karaya, alginate, acacia, methylcellulose, carboxy methyl cellulose, hydroxyl propyl methyl cellulose, locust bean, balangu seed, wild sage seed, basil seed, and cress seed gums) on the rheological, physicochemical, textural, and quality characteristics of bakery products. Gums addition improved volume and porosity of the breads and cakes. Gums influence on the gelatinization and retrogradation of starch and decreased the retrogradation of starch. In the bakery products, hydrocolloids were used to improving mixing and increasing the shelf life of the products through moisture preservation and avoidance of syneresis in some frozen foods. This study summarized the influence of the most common and new hydrocolloids on the rheological, physicochemical, textural, and quality characteristics of bakery products. Addition of seeds gum to the breads, biscuits, cakes, and pasta formula led to an increase in the viscosity of the batter. Also, the firmness of bakery products showed that they became softer with increasing gum levels.