Succinic acid in levels produced by yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) during fermentation strongly impacts wheat bread dough properties
•Succinic acid is a major organic acid produced by yeast during dough fermentation.•SA makes dough less extensible and increases the resistance to extension.•SA strongly reduces gluten agglomeration, but leads to gluten polymer swelling. Succinic acid (SA) was recently shown to be the major pH deter...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Food chemistry 2014-05, Vol.151, p.421-428 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Succinic acid is a major organic acid produced by yeast during dough fermentation.•SA makes dough less extensible and increases the resistance to extension.•SA strongly reduces gluten agglomeration, but leads to gluten polymer swelling.
Succinic acid (SA) was recently shown to be the major pH determining metabolite produced by yeast during straight-dough fermentation (Jayaram et al., 2013), reaching levels as high as 1.6mmol/100g of flour. Here, the impact of such levels of SA (0.8, 1.6 and 2.4mmol/100g flour) on yeastless dough properties was investigated. SA decreased the development time and stability of dough significantly. Uniaxial extension tests showed a consistent decrease in dough extensibility upon increasing SA addition. Upon biaxial extension in the presence of 2.4mmol SA/100g flour, a dough extensibility decrease of 47–65% and a dough strength increase of 25–40% were seen. While the SA solvent retention capacity of flour increased with increasing SA concentration in the solvent, gluten agglomeration decreased with gluten yield reductions of over 50%. The results suggest that SA leads to swelling and unfolding of gluten proteins, thereby increasing their interaction potential and dough strength, but simultaneously increasing intermolecular electrostatic repulsive forces. These phenomena lead to the reported changes in dough properties. Together, our results establish SA as an important yeast metabolite for dough rheology. |
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ISSN: | 0308-8146 1873-7072 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.foodchem.2013.11.025 |