Antioxidant properties and sensory profiles of breads containing barley flour

Food Chem. 2008 Sep 15;110(2):414-21. doi: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2008.02.054. Epub 2008 Feb 26.

Abstract

Breads were made by replacing 40% of wheat flour with barley flour. The incorporation of barley increased the antioxidant properties of the breads compared to the control bread. Furthermore, these properties proved to be dependent on the variety of barley as well as the extraction rate of the flour. The amount of free phenolics (TPC-S) decreased during the baking process, while the amount of bound phenolics increased (TPC-IS). At the same time, the measured antioxidant activities (FRAP-S and FRAP-IS) were relatively stable during the baking process. A sensory evaluation showed differences in sensory attributes, depending on the barley variety, and there was a good consistency between the sensory evaluation and the amount of phenolics. The present study showed that utilization of barley in breads has a beneficial health potential. However this will largely depend on the barley variety.

Keywords: Barley flours; Bread; Extractable-free phenolics; FRAP; Insoluble-bound phenolics; Multivariate statistic; Sensory evaluation; Storage; Wheat flours.