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DOI: 10.1094/CC-82-0671
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ARTICLE
Optimization of a Laboratory Dehulling Process for Lentil (Lens culinaris)
(1).
N. Wang (2,3). (1) Paper 896 of the Grain Research Laboratory, Canadian Grain
Commission, Winnipeg, MB, Canada R3C 3G8. (2) Canadian Grain Commission, Grain
Research Laboratory, 1404-303 Main Street, Winnipeg, MB, Canada R3C 3G8. (3)
Corresponding author. Phone: 204-983-2154. Fax: 204-983-0724. E-mail:
<nwang@grainscanada.gc.ca> Cereal Chem. 82(6):671-676. Accepted June 29,
2005. Copyright 2005 AACC
International, Inc.
Red lentil (Lens culinaris) is mainly processed into dehulled and split
forms before human consumption and characteristics such as dehulling efficiency
(DE), which is the sum of percent dehulled whole seed (PDW) and percent dehulled
split seed (PDS), are important to lentil breeders, processors, and exporters. A
laboratory Satake dehuller was used to evaluate the dehulling characteristics of
red lentil. The effects of dehulling conditions (abrasive wheel speed, dehulling
time, and seed moisture content) were investigated using response surface
methodology. Increasing dehulling time and seed moisture content decreased DE.
Increasing seed moisture content decreased powder and broken fractions but
increased the undehulled whole seed fraction. PDW was decreased but PDS was
increased as dehulling time was increased. Percent hull removed during
dehulling process decreased as seed moisture content was increased but increased
as abrasive wheel speed or dehulling time was increased. The optimum dehulling
conditions for the laboratory dehuller, based on maximizing DE and percent
hull removed while minimizing powder fraction (loss), were established. Good
agreement was found between experimental values for dehulling characteristics
(DE, PDW, PDS, hull removed, and powder produced) obtained at optimum dehulling
conditions and predicted values for those characteristics obtained using the
models developed.
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