ABSTRACT
African breadfruit (Treculia africana) seeds were processed
into whole, dehulled, malted and defatted flours. Flours from African
breadfruit and maize, and coconut grits were blended with the following
combinations: 0:95:5 (control), 20:75:5, 25:70:5, 30:65:5, 35:60:5 and 95:0:5%
for African breadfruit, maize and coconut respectively. The flour combinations
were mixed with other ingredients to form dough, placed in pans, baked, cut to
5cm length and packaged. Developed snack bars from whole, dehulled, malted and
defatted African breadfruit were analysed for proximate composition,
anti-nutrient factors, dietary fibre content, digestible, resistant and total
starch, in vitro protein and starch
digestibilities and in vitro glycemic
indices. A two factor factorial experiment in a completely randomized block
design was used to study the effects of processing, levels of African
breadfruit seed flour and the interaction of the two variables on the responses
analysed. Crude protein content of snack bars ranged from 16.16 to 27.15%,
crude fibre content of the snack bars ranged from 10.12 to 18.13 %, ash content
was from 2.66 to 4.57%, fat content ranged from 6.03 to 8.93% and energy
content was from 324.01 to 371.30 kcal/100g. Processing significantly
(p<0.05) reduced the anti-nutrient contents of the African breadfruit seed
flours and consequently the snack bars. Up to 51.72% reduction of tannin was
obtained by dehulling. Defatting, malting and dehulling resulted in 18.75, 34.37
and 65.62% reduction respectively in oxalate content. Highest reduction was
obtained by dehulling, and was 70.69% in phytate, 79.95% in saponin, and 48.17%
in trypsin inhibitor activity. Dehulling reduced the fibre content, while
malting and defatting processes increased the fibre content of the snack bars.
High fibre content was recorded in snack bars, which ranged from 10.72 to
30.41%. Snack bar formulated with 20% African breadfruit showed the highest in vitro starch and protein
digestibilities irrespective of the processing method involved. In vitro digestibilities decreased with
increasing amount of African breadfruit in the blend. Processing African
breadfruit significantly increased the in
vitro nutrient digestibilties investigated. An increase of 3.00 to 24.10%
by defatting, 5.90 to 29.09% by malting and 9.70 to 31 80% by dehulling was
recorded in in vitro starch
digestibility. Improvement, up to 9.97% by dehulling, 9.86% by malting and
8.64% by defatting, was recorded in in
vitro protein digestibility. In vitro
glycemic index of the snack bars ranged from 43.62 to 55.83%, which qualifies
their classification as low or medium glycemic index (GI) foods. Malted African
breadfruit based snacks recorded the highest values of essential amino acids.
Sensory evaluation revealed that 20:75:5 formulation was preferred and most
accepted above all other African breadfruit supplemented snack bars. Effect of
processing on the sensory scores showed snack bars from dehulled African
breadfruit was most preferred probably because of its high hedonic score in
appearance and aroma. All snack bar formulations had good sensory
acceptance.
ANNE, P (2022). Evaluation Of Quality Characteristics Of High Fibre And Nutrient Snack Bars Produced From African Breadfruit (Treculia Africana), Maize (Zea Mays) And Coconut (Cocos Nucifera) Blends. Repository.mouau.edu.ng: Retrieved Nov 23, 2024, from https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/evaluation-of-quality-characteristics-of-high-fibre-and-nutrient-snack-bars-produced-from-african-breadfruit-treculia-africana-maize-zea-mays-and-coconut-cocos-nucifera-blends-7-2
PETER, ANNE. "Evaluation Of Quality Characteristics Of High Fibre And Nutrient Snack Bars Produced From African Breadfruit (Treculia Africana), Maize (Zea Mays) And Coconut (Cocos Nucifera) Blends" Repository.mouau.edu.ng. Repository.mouau.edu.ng, 14 Nov. 2022, https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/evaluation-of-quality-characteristics-of-high-fibre-and-nutrient-snack-bars-produced-from-african-breadfruit-treculia-africana-maize-zea-mays-and-coconut-cocos-nucifera-blends-7-2. Accessed 23 Nov. 2024.
PETER, ANNE. "Evaluation Of Quality Characteristics Of High Fibre And Nutrient Snack Bars Produced From African Breadfruit (Treculia Africana), Maize (Zea Mays) And Coconut (Cocos Nucifera) Blends". Repository.mouau.edu.ng, Repository.mouau.edu.ng, 14 Nov. 2022. Web. 23 Nov. 2024. < https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/evaluation-of-quality-characteristics-of-high-fibre-and-nutrient-snack-bars-produced-from-african-breadfruit-treculia-africana-maize-zea-mays-and-coconut-cocos-nucifera-blends-7-2 >.
PETER, ANNE. "Evaluation Of Quality Characteristics Of High Fibre And Nutrient Snack Bars Produced From African Breadfruit (Treculia Africana), Maize (Zea Mays) And Coconut (Cocos Nucifera) Blends" Repository.mouau.edu.ng (2022). Accessed 23 Nov. 2024. https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/evaluation-of-quality-characteristics-of-high-fibre-and-nutrient-snack-bars-produced-from-african-breadfruit-treculia-africana-maize-zea-mays-and-coconut-cocos-nucifera-blends-7-2