• Title/Summary/Keyword: Rice powder muffins

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Quality characteristics of muffins prepared with different types of rice flour (쌀가루의 종류를 달리하여 제조한 머핀의 품질 특성)

  • Ji-Hye Chu;Jin-Hee Choi;Eun-Seong Go;Hae-Yeon Choi
    • Food Science and Preservation
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    • v.30 no.4
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    • pp.630-641
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    • 2023
  • The quality characteristics of muffins with different types of rice flour, such as soft flour (CON), soft rice flour (SRF), floury rice flour (FRF), and rice flour (RF) were assessed by using Image J program, which includes their particle size analysis, moisture content, pH, color, specific volume, baking loss rate, texture. (D[4, 3]) is weighted mean diameter, which is directly obtained in particle size measurements showed large values in the order of rice flour, floury rice flour, soft rice flour, and soft flour. The moisture content was high in the CON and SRF groups with small particle sizes. There was no significant difference in pH, L and b value. The a value was significantly low only in the RF group with large particle size. The smaller the particle size, the higher the specific volume and baking loss rate. Image J showed that the number of pores decreased when fewer smaller particles were the powder, but the pores were larger. Among the rice flours, the SRF group, excluding the CON group, scored high in all the acceptability elements. The results from this study can be used as basic data that can contribute to research on various rice-processed foods.

Adding Germinated Brown Rice Soaked in a Mycelial Culture Broth of Phellinus linteus to Muffins: An Assessment Using the Response Surface Methodology (반응표면분석법을 이용한 상황버섯균사체 배양액 침지 발아현미 첨가 머핀의 제조 조건 최적화)

  • Jung, Kyong-Im;Cho, Eun-Kyung
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
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    • v.40 no.6
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    • pp.892-902
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    • 2011
  • The purpose of this study was to develop a muffin recipe that included germinated brown rice powder soaked in a mycelial culture broth of Phellinus linteus (GBRP). Muffins were made using various quantities of GBRP, butter, and milk. An assessment was conducted using the response surface methodology (RSM), which included 16 experimental points with three replicates for the three independent variables: GBRP, butter, and milk. The physical and chemical evaluation using the RSM showed no significant differences; whereas the hardness, cohesiveness, springiness, gumminess, and chewiness indicated significant differences in the relationships between the factors (p<0.05). The sensory evaluation using the RSM was highly effective in describing the relationships between overall acceptability and taste (p<0.001). Thus, the optimal combination of ingredients in a GBRP muffin, as assessed with numerical and graphical methods, was 84.041 g GBRP, 110.224 g butter, and 80.0 g milk.