Effect of Wheat Bran Incorporation on the Physical and Sensory Properties of a South African Cereal Fried Dough

Foods. 2019 Nov 7;8(11):559. doi: 10.3390/foods8110559.

Abstract

This study investigated the effect of wheat bran (WB) supplementation on the physical and sensory properties of a South African cereal fried dough (magwinya). The physical properties, instrumental texture, and sensory profile were determined for magwinya (100:0, control) and for wheat flour to wheat-bran ratios of 95:5 (MWB5), 90:10 (MWB10), 85:15 (MWB15), and 80:20 (MWB20). An increase in the proportion of WB in the fried dough showed no significant difference on the specific volume (1.47-1.54) of samples. The chroma value (30.19-22.29), lightness (35.92-28.98), and hue angle (55.03-47.77) decreased, while ∆E increased distinctly with the addition of WB. Magwinya supplemented with WB was less cohesive and easy to chew. Significant correlations were found between instrumental hardness and sensory springiness (r = -0.63; p < 0.05), as well as between instrumental cohesiveness and chewiness (r = -0.71; p < 0.01). Two principal components were identified, which accounted for 85.1% of the variance in the instrumental data. A substitution level of 5 and 10% WB was similar to the sensory properties of the control in taste, texture, and overall acceptability and can replace part of the wheat flour in the cereal fried dough production.

Keywords: cereal fried dough; consumer acceptability; sensory profile; texture profile; wheat bran.