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DOI: 10.1094/CC-82-0559
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ARTICLE
Environmental Influences on Flour Quality for Sheeted Noodles in Idaho 377s
Hard White Wheat (1).
R. McLean (2), K. M. O’Brien (3), L. E. Talbert (4), P. Bruckner (4), D.
K. Habernicht (4), M. J. Guttieri (3), and E. J. Souza (3,5). (1) Research
funded in part by the USDA-CSREES Fund for Rural America, Idaho Agricultural
Experiment Station project IDA01141-FRA. University of Idaho Agricultural
Experiment Station paper. (2) Pendleton Flour Mills, Blackfoot, ID 83221. (3)
University of Idaho, Aberdeen, ID 83210. (4) Montana State University, Bozeman,
MT 59717-3140. (5) Corresponding author. E-mail: <esouza@uidaho.edu> Cereal Chem.
82(5):559-564. Accepted May 13, 2005. Copyright 2005 AACC International, Inc.
Production of common wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in the Pacific
Northwest of the United States specifically for Asian noodle products is a
relatively new goal for grain producers. We surveyed commercial fields of the
hard white spring wheat cultivar Idaho 377s in two years to determine the
variables contributing to Asian noodle quality and to validate previous
observations made with small-plot research. Fields were surveyed in 1998 and
1999 in two areas of the Snake River Plain of southeastern Idaho separated by
approximately 100 km, with both irrigated fields and rain-fed fields sampled in both zones.
Samples were evaluated for grain characteristics then milled and evaluated for
flour quality, alkaline noodle color, and color and texture of nonalkaline
Chinese (salted, neutral pH) noodles. Grain from rain-fed fields produced
brighter and more yellow alkaline noodles than grain from irrigated fields.
Grain produced in rain-fed fields also had lower peak flour pasting viscosity
than grain produced in irrigated fields. Flour ash was lowest in grain from
rain-fed fields located in a higher elevation district (Upper Valley) and
greatest in grain from irrigated fields located in a lower elevation district
(Lower Valley). Noodle hardness and chewiness were greater in Chinese noodles
made from grain produced in the Upper Valley than grain from the Lower Valley.
Chinese noodle color had significant interaction with the location and
irrigation management used for producing the grain. However, Chinese noodle
brightness was consistently negatively correlated with flour protein
concentration. The color and texture of noodles produced from flours milled from
on-farm commercial production was consistent with previous experiment station
small-plot research.
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