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Related Experiment Videos

Lipid interactions in breadmaking.

N O Carr1, N W Daniels, P J Frazier

  • 1Dalgety PLC, Group Research Laboratory, Cambridge, United Kingdom.

Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition
|January 1, 1992
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Lipids in flour and added fats are crucial for breadmaking. This review suggests lipid binding involves mesophase transformation and gluten network occlusion, clarifying their technological functions.

Area of Science:

  • Food Science
  • Biochemistry
  • Material Science

Background:

  • Lipids, both natural and added, significantly influence bread production.
  • Understanding lipid-flour protein interactions is key to breadmaking technology.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To review and assess the chemical and physical interactions of fat in breadmaking.
  • To elucidate the technological functions of lipids based on their interactions with flour components.

Main Methods:

  • Literature review of existing publications on lipid-protein interactions in dough.
  • Analysis of chemical and physical properties of fat during bread production.
  • Comparison of proposed lipid binding mechanisms with established theories.

Main Results:

Related Experiment Videos

  • Contradictory findings in previous literature regarding lipid binding are highlighted.
  • Evidence suggests lipid binding involves mesophase transformation.
  • Nonspecific occlusion of lipid phases within the gluten network is proposed as a mechanism.

Conclusions:

  • Lipid binding mechanisms, including mesophase transformation and occlusion, offer explanations for lipid functions in breadmaking.
  • These findings reconcile previous contradictory observations in lipid-flour interactions.
  • A clearer understanding of lipid roles in dough development and bread quality is provided.