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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of prebiotic inulin-type fructans on structure, quality, sensory acceptance and glycemic response of gluten-free breads

TLDR
Prebiotic ITFs are a promising improver for GFB that can provide nutritional (11% dietary fiber content, low glycemic response) and functional benefits to patients with celiac disease, since they are prebiotic ingredients that can also increase calcium absorption.
Abstract
The effect of adding increasing levels of prebiotic inulin-type fructans (ITFs) (0, 4, 8, 10 and 12%) on the sensory and nutritional quality of gluten-free bread (GFB) was assessed. ITFs can provide structure and gas retention during baking, thus improving GFB quality by yielding better specific volume, softer crumb, improved crust and crumb browning with enhanced sensory acceptance. During baking, approximately one-third of the ITFs was lost. The addition of 12% ITFs to the basic formulation is required in order to obtain GFB enriched with 8% ITFs (4 g of fructans per 50 g bread serving size), levels that can provide health benefits. 12% ITFs-addition level decreased GFB glycemic index (from 71 to 48) and glycemic load (from 12 to 8). Prebiotic ITFs are a promising improver for GFB that can provide nutritional (11% dietary fiber content, low glycemic response) and functional benefits to patients with celiac disease, since ITFs are prebiotic ingredients that can also increase calcium absorption.

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A review of bioactive plant polysaccharides: Biological activities, functionalization, and biomedical applications

TL;DR: The main goal of this paper was to review the sources, natively biological activities, isolation, characterization, and the structural features of natively bioactive polysaccharides from wood species to maximally exploit their various valuable properties in previously unperceived applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Novel Approaches in Gluten‐Free Breadmaking: Interface between Food Science, Nutrition, and Health

TL;DR: Detailed research on interfacing food science, nutrition, and health is needed so that a GFB with both good technological and nutritional properties can be prepared and made more available to those with celiac disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding gluten-free dough for reaching breads with physical quality and nutritional balance

TL;DR: This review aims to provide some insights on dough functionality and process conditions regarding bread quality and to point out recent research dealing with the nutritional composition of gluten-free foodstuffs that resemble gluten-containing foods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nutritional aspects of gluten-free products

TL;DR: The improvement of the nutritional quality of GF products, and in turn that of the GF diet, should also be aimed at lowering the risk of later chronic degenerative disorders, especially for infants and young children.
Journal ArticleDOI

Past, present and future: The strength of plant-based dairy substitutes based on gluten-free raw materials

TL;DR: Research studies are approaching the nutritional quality of plant-based dairy substitutes, such as improving the protein quality and glycaemic properties, and there is still a need for much more diversified studies in order to overcome stability, textural, nutritional and sensory problems.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

International table of glycemic index and glycemic load values: 2002

TL;DR: This revised glycemic index table contains almost 3 times the number of foods listed in the original table and contains nearly 1300 data entries derived from published and unpublished verified sources, representing > 750 different types of foods tested with the use of standard methods.
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Dietary modulation of the human colonic microbiota: updating the concept of prebiotics

TL;DR: The future use of prebiotics may allow species-level changes in the microbiota, an extrapolation into genera other than the bifidobacteria and lactobacilli, and allow preferential use in disease-prone areas of the body.
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A starch hydrolysis procedure to estimate glycemic index

TL;DR: In this article, an in vitro procedure to measure the rate of starch digestion in starchy common foodstuffs was developed, and a first-order equation that rules the hydrolytic process was found: CC∞ (1−e −kt ).
Journal ArticleDOI

International tables of glycemic index and glycemic load values: 2008

TL;DR: In this article, the authors systematically tabulate published and unpublished sources of reliable glycemic index (GI) values to improve the quality and quantity of GI data available for research and clinical practice.
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