Effect of soy flour addition and heatprocessing method on nutritional quality and consumer acceptability of cassava complementary porridges
Date Issued
2012-06Date Online
2012-01Language
enType
Journal ArticleReview status
Peer ReviewISI journal
Accessibility
Limited AccessMetadata
Show full item recordCitation
Muoki, P.N., Kock, H.L. de & Emmambux, M.N. (2012). Effect of soy flour addition and heat‐processing method on nutritional quality and consumer acceptability of cassava complementary porridges. Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 92(8), 1771-1779.
Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80846
Abstract/Description
BACKGROUND: The nutritional quality of cassava complementary porridge was improved through extrusion cooking and compositing with either defatted or full fat soy flour (65:35 w/w), and product acceptability by mothers with children of the target population was evaluated.
RESULTS: The protein digestibility-corrected amino acid score (PDCAAS) of extrusion- and conventionally cooked composite porridges was within the recommendations for complementary foods. The kinetics of starch digestibility showed that all porridges had a rapid rate of starch digestibility, but the rate was lower when defatted soy flour was added and lowest when full fat soy flour was added. The formation of amylase-lipid complexes as shown by X-ray diffraction and differential scanning calorimetry can be attributed to the lower digestibility of extrusion-cooked porridge with full fat soy flour. If fed thrice per day, extrusion-cooked porridge with defatted or full fat soy flour would meet the energy, protein and available lysine requirements of a child aged 6–8 months receiving low or average nutrients from breast milk. All porridges were well received by Mozambican mothers who use cassava as a staple food. The mean scores for sensory liking of all porridges were 3 and above on a five-point hedonic scale.
CONCLUSION: Extrusion-cooked cassava/soy flour porridges have good potential for use as high-energy/high-protein complementary foods and have acceptable sensory properties. Copyright © 2012 Society of Chemical Industry
Other CGIAR Affiliations
AGROVOC Keywords
Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
University of Pretoria; International Institute of Tropical AgricultureCollections
- IITA Journal Articles [4998]
- RTB Journal Articles [1344]
