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Publication no. C-2003-1215-05R
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ARTICLE
Extrusion of Regular and Waxy Barley Flours for Production of Expanded
Cereals.
Byung-Kee Baik (1,2), Joseph Powers (1), and Linhda T. Nguyen (1). (1) Assistant
professor, associate professor, and research assistant, respectively; Department
of Food Science & Human Nutrition and IMPACT, Washington State University,
Pullman, WA 99164-6376. (2) Corresponding author. Phone: 509-335-8230. E-mail:
<bbaik@wsu.edu> Cereal Chem. 81(1):94-99. Accepted July 8, 2003. Copyright 2004 American
Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.
Grains of two regular and two waxy barley cultivars were milled into break and
reduction stream flours using a wheat milling mill, granulated to facilitate
feeding and flow through the barrel, and extruded to form expanded products
using a modified laboratory single-screw extruder. As moisture content of barley
granules decreased from 21 to 17%, the expansion index of extrudates increased
from 1.81 to 2.68, while apparent modulus of compression work (AMCW) decreased
from 17.1 × 10(^4) to 7.8 × 10(^4) N/m(^2). Break stream flours of both
regular and waxy barley produced extrudates with higher expansion index
(2.72-3.02), higher water absorption index (WAI), and lower AMCW than extrudates
from reduction stream flours. Extrudates produced from regular barley had
generally higher expansion and lower density than those produced from waxy
barley. The specific mechanical energy (SME) was greater during extrusion of
regular than of waxy barley. Barrel temperatures of 130, 150, and 170°C for the
feeding, compression, and metering sections, respectively, resulted in higher
SME, higher expansion index, lower water absorption index and lower AMCW of
extrudates compared with a constant extruder barrel temperature of 160°C.
Increased screw speed generally resulted in larger expansion index and increased
WAI of extrudates. With increased feed rate from 89 to 96 g/min, the expansion
index of extrudates decreased from 3.20 to 2.78 in regular barley and 3.23 to
2.72 in waxy barley, and harder extrudates were produced.
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