December 03, 2017

04/12/2017: Gelatinisation and enzyme activity analysis standardised worldwide

The Brabender Amylograph-E measures starch proper-ties and enzyme activity, e. g. resulting from sprout damage (alpha amylase enzyme activity)

 
Brabender Amylograph-E
Image credit: Brabender
Why is this important?

The baking properties of flour depend on the starch gelatinisation and on the enzyme activity (α-amylase) in the flour. Sprouting in wheat, indicated by high enzyme activity, produces sticky dough that can cause problems during processing and results in products with poor colour and weak texture. Flour supplied from the mill can be checked if it meets the specifications for a given application.

How is the test performed?

A sample from flour and water is mixed to a slurry, heated with a constant heating rate of 1.5°C / min within a rotating bowl. The slurry becomes a paste as the starch granules swell. Depending on the viscosity of the suspension, measuring pins reaching into the bowl are deflected. The deflection is measured as viscosity over time, i. e. vs. temperature, and recorded on-line. Evaluation: Beginning of gelatinisation, gelatinisation maximum and temperature.

Standards fullfilled (amongst others):
- ICC-Standard no. 126/1
- ISO 7973
- AACC Method no. 22-10



 

What are the benefits?
- Compliance with international standards for testing flour quality
- Practice-oriented test procedure: recording of the full enzyme activity, no deactivation of enzymes before recording, heating rate similar to the crumb inside the bread
- High flour and end product quality: Prediction of the flour‘s baking characteristics, well-aimed addition of enzymes
- No production losses due to usage of inappropriate material


For more information visit the Brabender website, HERE.
 

The Global Miller

This blog is maintained by The Global Miller staff and is supported by the magazine Milling and Grain
which is published by Perendale Publishers Limited.


For additional daily news from milling around the world: global-milling.com

No comments:

Post a Comment




See our data and privacy policy Click here