Scientists at the University of Maryland evaluated baking time and
temperature to see how they affect the availability of antioxidant
properties in baked pizza crust. They found that processing conditions
may significantly affect the antioxidant availability of wheat-based
products. It's possible to optimize processing variables to produce
better functional foods with a greater level of available antioxidants.
Essentially, changing preparation techniques for pizza crust can
alter its antioxidant properties. By increasing certain factors, such as
baking time, the researchers were able to increase antioxidant
properties. Increasing the fermentation time was also able to increase
those properties. Investigators tested the effect of different
fermentation times--up to 48 hours--and found antioxidant levels can
increase by 100%.
Pizza crusts were prepared using the Trego and Lakin varieties of
wheat. Trego is a hard white winter wheat variety developed in recent
years by researchers at the Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station of
Kansas State University. Lakin is a hard white wheat. Both varieties
were analyzed for their total phenolic content and radical scavenging
capacity against the 2, 2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH); cation ABTS;
peroxyl (oxygen radical absorbance capacity--ORAC); and hydroxyl (HOSC)
radicals.
In general, increasing the degree of thermal processing increased
the availability of antioxidants in the pizza crust. Increasing the
baking time from 7 to 14 minutes at 400 F increased total phenolic
compound (TPC) values by 20% and 13%, and DPPH and ABTS radical
scavenging capacities by 38% and 33%, respectively, in the Trego and
Lakin wheat varieties.
These data suggest that the specific variety of wheat may alter the
effects of thermal processing on antioxidant properties. Increasing
baking temperatures from 400 F to 550 F with a baking time of 7 minutes
increased TPC values by 29% to 42%; and radical scavenging capacities by
44% to 45%, 12% to 34%, 13% to 33%, and 31% to 32% for DPPH, ORAC, HOSC,
and 2, 2'-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulphonic acid) (ABTS),
respectively.
Further information. Liangli Yu, Department of Nutrition and Food
Science, University of Maryland-College Park, 0112 Skinner Building,
College Park, MD 20742; phone: 301 405-0761; fax: 301-314-3313; email:
lyu5@umd.edu.
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