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Prediction of Specific Japanese Sponge Cake Volume Using Pasting Properties of Flour

November 2010 Volume 87 Number 6
Pages 505 — 510
Kazuhiro Nakamura,1,2 Yoshinori Taniguchi,1 Masato Taira,1 and Hiroyuki Ito1

National Agricultural Research Center for Tohoku Region, Akahira, Kuriyagawa, Morioka 020-0198, Japan. Corresponding author. E-mail: kznaka@affrc.go.jp


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Accepted July 18, 2010.
ABSTRACT

In Japanese soft wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) breeding programs, protein content (PC), and specific surface area (SSA) of flour have been used as important factors for the baking quality of Japanese sponge cake. We proposed batter pasting viscosity (BPV) as a parameter to predict the baking quality of Japanese sponge cake. BPV was measured using a Rapid Visco-Analyser (RVA) with a modified heating profile. Twenty soft wheat samples from the 2006-07 season and 22 from the 2007-08 season, including Japanese soft wheat cultivars, advanced breeders' lines, and Western White (WW) imported from the United States, were milled and evaluated for solvent retention capacity (SRC) values of four solvents, batter pasting properties, flour pasting properties, PC, SSA, and specific cake volume (SCV) to investigate their relationships. BPV was the most strongly correlated of the parameters to SCV (r = –0.90, P < 0.001). Stepwise multiple regression analysis selected BPV and minimum viscosity (MV) of flour pasting as significant independent variables to predict SCV (corrected R2 = 0.848). The variability in BPV related to cake batter expansion was highly explained by PC and sucrose SRC (corrected R2 = 0.854, P < 0.001). MV was correlated to SSA (r = 0.56, P < 0.001) and might be related to the prevention of sponge cake shrinkage during baking.



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