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DOI: 10.1094/CC-82-0138
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ARTICLE
Differences in the Aleurone Layer Fate Between Hard and Soft Common Wheats at
Grain Milling.
V. Greffeuille (1,2), J. Abecassis (1), C. Bar L’Helgouac’h
(2), and V. Lullien-Pellerin (1,3). (1) UMR Ingénierie des Agropolymères et
Technologies Emergentes, INRA, 2 Place Viala, 34060 Montpellier Cedex 01. (2)
ARVALIS, Institut du Végétal, 16 rue Nicolas Fortin, 75013 Paris. (3)
Corresponding author. Fax: 33 (0) 4 67 52 20 94. E-mail: <lullien@ensam.inra.fr>
Cereal Chem. 82(2):138-143. Accepted July 28, 2004. Copyright 2005 American
Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.
In the milling process, efficient separation between the starchy endosperm and
the other grain tissues is a key parameter estimated by ash measurement. Because
this separation occurs near the aleurone layer interface, better understanding
of this tissue fractionation is critical for a better analysis of the wheat
milling behavior. Samples from hard and soft common wheat cultivars that had the
same protein content were processed on a pilot mill, and whole grain meals or
flour streams were analyzed for ash content. The para-coumaric acid (p-CA)
and phytic acid flour contents were compared with ash measurement and used as
markers of the aleurone cell walls or aleurone cell content, respectively. A
greater amount of phytic acid in hard wheat flour compared with soft wheat flour
was found and reveals a distinct milling behavior between those wheat classes,
mainly at the breaking step. Therefore simple ash content measurement is not
sufficient to analyze flour purity. At the reduction stage, quantity of phytic
acid increases with the other markers and may result from the overall mechanical
resistance of the aleurone tissue. As a consequence, wheat hardness not only
determines grain milling behavior but also affects flour composition.
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