Publication | Closed Access
Production and evaluation of cold extruded and baked ready-to- eat snacks from blends of breadfruit ( Treculia africana) , cashewnut ( Anacardium occidentale) and coconut ( Cocos nucifera)
22
Citations
26
References
2014
Year
NutritionEngineeringFood AnalysisAgricultural EconomicsPhysical PropertiesFood ChemistryBody CompositionFood TechnologyHealth SciencesReady-to- Eat SnacksFood CompositionCocos NuciferaFood ComponentFood QualityCashew NutFood EngineeringFood ProcessingSeed ProcessingSensory EvaluationTreculia Africana
Five samples of ready-to-eat (RTE) snacks were produced by cold extrusion, baking (150 o C for 30 minutes) and drying (50 o C for 15 minutes) from blends of breadfruit, cashew nut, whole and defatted coconut along with other ingredients. The snacks were subjected to physical, chemical and sensory analyses. The results revealed the following ranges: physical properties (bulk density 0.32 to 0.51g/cm 3 , apparent density 0.37 to 0.49g/cm 3 , porosity -6.08 to 0.28g/cm 3 and lateral expansion 16% to 22%); proximate parameters (moisture 1.33 to 3.08%, ash 1.97 to 2.05%, crude fibre 0.32 to 1.47%, crude protein 13.45 to 15.90%, crude fat 13.37 to 21.50% and carbohydrate 62.27 to 66.49%) and micronutrients (vitamin B 0.202 to 0.501mg/100g, vitamin B 1 0.130 to 0.423mg/100g, vitamin B 2 0.014 to 0.114mg/100g, vitamin B 3 0.157 to 0.477mg/100g and iron 2.61 to 5.86mg/100g). Sensory evaluation revealed that highly acceptable nutrient dense snacks were produced from blends of breadfruit, cashewnut, and defatted coconut. Keywords: Physical properties, Proximate composition, Micronutrients, Sensory properties.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1