The impacts of germinating organic wheat: effects on phytic acid, resistant starch, and functional properties of flour, and sensory attributes of sourdough bread
Alexandra Stern, Julia Berstein, Stephen S. Jones, Jeffrey B. Blumberg, Timothy S. Griffin
Abstract
Summary This study assessed the impact of germination duration on two varieties of wheat grown organically (Expresso and Syngenta SY Basalt (Basalt)). In Expresso, d ‐glucose content increased from 0.06 g/100 g in the control to 0.55 g/100 g after a 24‐h germination period ( P < 0.05). In both varieties, similar increases were observed for sucrose and maltose, and no pattern emerged for resistant starch or phytate. In Basalt, baseline phytate (0 h 1.07 g/100 g) did not differ from treatment groups (6 h 0.97 g/100 g; 12 h 0.98 g/100 g; 24 h 1.09 g/100 g; 36 h 0.98 g/100 g). Functional properties of flour decreased with germination duration and resulted in bread which panellists perceived to have inferior crumb (24 h Expresso; 36 h Basalt; P < 0.05). However, there was no difference in the overall acceptability of breads across treatments and inclusion of germinated wheat improved bread sweetness.