Publication
Properties of dried plum supplemented peanut muffins fortified with calcium
Details
Author(s):
MJ Hinds; T Bowser; S Reilly
Type of Document:
Conference Proceeding or Document
Publisher/Journal:
American Peanut Research and Education Society
Date of Publication:
2004
Place of Publication:
Not Available
Links
Description
Abstract: Products that contribute positively to bone health are in demand because of the steady increase in percent
of 50-year old plus consumers. Dried plums contain boron and selenium which modulate bone and calcium
metabolism, and preserve bone mineral density. Dried plum consumption has also been observed to increase rate of bone formation in postmenopausal women. However, current utilization level of dried plum
as an ingredient in bakery products is 3-5%. From previous studies, muffins containing peanut flour and
peanut butter had good texture when up to 60% wheat flour was replaced by peanut (12% fat) flour. The
objectives of this study was to ascertain the highest levels of 12%-fat peanut flour and dried plum powder that
could be used to develop muffins with good quality. Response surface methodology and a three-level Box-
Behnken Balanced Incomplete Block Design were used to evaluate the effects of peanut flour (PF: 50, 75,
100% wheat flour replacement), dried plum puree powder containing 97% dried plum and 3% calcium stearate (DPP: 6, 15, 24% wt of dried ingredients), calcium stearoyl lactylate (CSL: 1.5, 2.0, 2.5% wt of dried
ingredients), and glycerol monostearate (GMS: 0.5, 1.0, 1.5% wt dried ingredients) on muffin properties.
Texture profile (TA XT2i Texture Analyzer fitted with TA-25 probe at test speed of 2 mm/sec), color (Minolta
Chomameter), water activity (Rotronic meter) and sensory screening were used to evaluate experimental
and commercial muffins and set limits for acceptability. Muffins became a darker brown (decreased hue
angle and L value) as PF and DPP were increased. Hardness of the muffin treatments increased as PF and
DPP increased, and peaked at 100% PF and 24% DPP. When CSL was 1.5%, muffin crumb had highest cohesiveness with PF=100% or DPP=24%, and least cohesiveness for combined highest levels of PF
(100%) and DPP (24%). When CSL was 2.0-2.5%, cohesiveness Generally increased with increased PF, but decreased with increased DPP. Muffin springiness peaked when DPP was 8-11%, whereas muffin resilience Generally decreased with increased GMS. Optimization studies based on RSM predictions and sensory evaluation indicated that good quality high-peanut-plum muffins could be obtained when formulations containing either 75%PF + 24%DPP or 84.4%PF + 18.2%DPP are used.