The values for dietary fibre in the current UK food tables were obtained using a fractionation method which involved digestion of starch with a takadiastase preparation. For the revision of the food tables new values for the dietary fibre in cereal and cereal-containing meat products were obtained by an improved fractionation method which used a mixture of amyloglucosidase and a-amylase to digest starch. The full details of this analytical method are given, along with the fibre components which were found in 138 cereal-containing foods. This method produced higher values than the previous method in most processed cereal products. Also the levels of pentoses in the non-cellulosic polysaccharide fraction and of lignin residues are greater. The study considerably extends the range of cereal-containing foods for which the amount of dietary fibre and its components has been determined.
The vitamin A activity of 246 samples of 59 different foods of animal origin was determined by high performance liquid chromatography. Wherever possible, the amounts of all-trans retinol, 13-cis-retinol, dehydroretinol, retinaldehyde and /I-carotene were measured. The relative activity of these components is discussed, and the results compared with previous estimates of the vitamin A content of these foods.
Representative samples of loaves of white and brown sliced and unsliced breads were obtained in seven regional centres in Britain for separate analysis; samples of 13 different types of breads and rolls were purchased in each region but were then bulked into nationally representative samples; and nine other breads and rolls were purchased in the London area only. Considerable difficulties were encountered in all regions in correctly identifying wholemeal products. Each type of bread was analysed for moisture, protein, fat, sugars, starch, dietary fibre, sodium, calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, iron, copper, zinc, manganese, chloride, thiamin, riboflavin, nicotinic acid, vitamin Be, free and total folic acid. There were no significant regional differences in the nutrient content of the white and brown sliced and unsliced breads. The presence of salt added during baking also showed no regional differences. Unsliced and unwrapped white and brown loaves contained less moisture than sliced loaves and hence slightly higher levels of nutrients. However, there were no significant differences on a dry matter basis. Breads and rolls are nutritionally variable products, but generally the nutritional content reflected the extraction rates of the flours from which they were baked and the requirement to fortify with nutrients under the Bread and Flour Regulations (1963). Levels of dietary fibre and total folic acid were higher than those previously published, and energy, protein, fat, available carbohydrate, iron and thiamin levels were slightly lower. The levels of fat reflected the quantity of wheat germ and fats added during baking. The fatty acid compositions also depended on the level of high melting point bakery fat added as an ingredient.
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