Publication | Closed Access
INFLUENCE OF WATER ON THE CRISPNESS OF CEREAL‐BASED FOODS: ACOUSTIC, MECHANICAL, AND SENSORY STUDIES
155
Citations
20
References
1998
Year
NutritionEngineeringMechanical EngineeringAgricultural EconomicsSoft MatterTexture PropertiesGlass TransitionMechanicsCrispy BreadRheologyFood TechnologyHealth SciencesMaterials ScienceFood PhysicAnd Sensory StudiesFood MicrostructureSolid MechanicsFood QualityFood StructureFood SafetyMechanical PropertiesFood TextureMechanics Of Materials
ABSTRACT The texture properties of crispy breads were studied as a function of water content using compression tests, acoustic measurements and sensory analysis. The addition of water slowly lowers the characteristics associated with crispness up to 9%, after which they steeply decrease. Dynamic Mechanical Thermal Analysis (DMTA) measurements were carried out, at room temperature and at 5 Hz, on the same bread samples. The evolution of the textural properties of crispy bread are accompanied by an increase of the loss factor prior to the one associated to the glass transition. It was therefore proposed that the effect of water on the brittle character, on crispness and on the intensity of the sound emitted at fracture were due to the onset of molecular motions preceding or accompanying the glass transition.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1