2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2016.10.052
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The impact of germination time on the some selected parameters through malting process

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Cited by 43 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…It has been reported that germination causes an increase of β-glucanases activity, which are the primary enzymes responsible for breaking down cereal endosperm cell walls during germination, thus reducing β-glucan levels [28,29]. Our results agree with those reported by Rimsten et al [30], who showed slight losses in β-glucan levels in barley grains germinated for 96 h after steeping at 48 • C. On the contrary, larger reductions of β-glucan content (50% after 48-120 h of germination) were found in germinated barley [31]. These studies have shown that longer germination times caused higher β-glucan degradation, results in line with the ones found in the present study.…”
Section: Effect Of Germination On β-Glucan Content Of Sprouted Barleysupporting
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It has been reported that germination causes an increase of β-glucanases activity, which are the primary enzymes responsible for breaking down cereal endosperm cell walls during germination, thus reducing β-glucan levels [28,29]. Our results agree with those reported by Rimsten et al [30], who showed slight losses in β-glucan levels in barley grains germinated for 96 h after steeping at 48 • C. On the contrary, larger reductions of β-glucan content (50% after 48-120 h of germination) were found in germinated barley [31]. These studies have shown that longer germination times caused higher β-glucan degradation, results in line with the ones found in the present study.…”
Section: Effect Of Germination On β-Glucan Content Of Sprouted Barleysupporting
confidence: 92%
“…As germination proceeded, GI increased significantly in barley as consequence of the release of reducing sugars. In fact, studies performed in barley and brown rice found an enhancement of reducing sugars levels during germination due to hydrolysis of starch by α-amylase and β-amylase enzymes [31,45].…”
Section: Effect Of Germination On Glycemic Index (Gi) Of Sprouted Barmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the adverse conditions, sowing the malting variety, and supplying it with 30-60 kg·ha -1 of nitrogen resulted in optimal quality of barley. Schmitt et al (2013), Farzaneh et al (2017) and Kleinwachter M. et al (2014) define malting as a process of controlled germination of barley caryopses in appropriate conditions by soaking them, stimulating enzymatic activity and partial growth of the cotyledon, and then subjecting them to drying and germination. The processes occurring during malting and wort extraction are mainly hydrolysis of starch, conducted by three hydrolytic enzymes: α-amylase, β-amylase and α-glucosidase.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The process takes one to two days . Germination starts at a moisture content of >30% . During germination, the rehydrated grain generates enzymes, which initiate a multitude of processes in both the embryo and endosperm necessary for malt to achieve a high extract yield, acceptable fermentation and satisfactory filtration .…”
Section: Fate Of Mycotoxins During the Brewing Processmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These enzymes, such as the amylases, proteases and β ‐glucanases, are required in subsequent steps, especially during mashing, where they are the three major enzymatic reactions that will continue hydrolysing the gelatinised starch into fermentable sugars (glucose, fructose, sucrose, maltose and maltotriose), proteins into free amino acids and the degradation of β ‐glucan chains . The grain is then maintained at a suitable moisture level (between 42 and 48%) and temperature (12–17°C) until (after about 5 days) the necessary enzyme development and the accompanying structural and substrate modifications have been achieved . For sorghum, optimised conditions include steeping to 41% moisture and germination at 27°C for seven days .…”
Section: Fate Of Mycotoxins During the Brewing Processmentioning
confidence: 99%