Objective. To assess an intervention to reduce salt intake based on an agreement with the food industry.
Methods. Salt content was measured in bakery products
a b s t r a c tPea (Pisum sativum L. var. Laguna) seeds were submitted to extrusion process at 129, 135 and 142 C and modifications on the proximate composition and nutritional parameters were evaluated. Peas were a good source of protein (24 g/100 g), amino acids (sulphur amino acids were the limiting ones), dietary fibre (18 g/100 g), carbohydrates (53 g/100 g), energy (330 kcal/100 g), riboflavin and thiamine (0.1 e0.2 mg/100 g). Pea seeds also contained non-nutritive compounds such as a-galactosides (4 g/100 g), phytic acid (0.4 g/100 g) and trypsin inhibitor activity (2 TIU/mg). Extrusion cooking caused a slight increase of protein and fat content, whilst it reduced dietary fibre, thiamine and a-galactosides, and led to negligible trypsin inhibitor activity (TIA) levels. The protein quality of pea measured by biological indexes (net protein utilisation, net protein ratio, relative net protein ratio, true protein digestibility and biological value) was not affected by extrusion treatments. Protein quality measured by chemical indexes (chemical score and protein digestibility corrected amino acid score) decreased in processed peas. Among extruded peas, those processed at 135 C presented the highest chemical indexes. Therefore, the aforementioned condition could be considered adequate for the manufacture of novel pea-derived products with high nutritive value.
The objectives of the present study were to measure the ideal salt concentration in French-type bread among Argentine consumers in a home-usage-test (HUT) considering income status and salt content of daily bread consumption as covariables, and to compare the ideal salt concentrations measured in a HUT and a central-location test (CLT). For the HUT, 420 consumers each received a sample of bread with a single salt concentration, and for the CLT, 100 consumers each received 7 samples with different salt concentrations. For each sample, consumers responded if they found the bread "not-salty-enough,""okay," or "too-salty." Neither income level nor salt content of daily bread influenced probability of rejection. The optimum sodium concentrations (milligrams per 100 g of bread dry basis) +/- 95% confidence limits for the HUT and CLT were 980 +/- 74 and 1157 +/- 87, respectively. These values are substantially higher than 628, the mean sodium content of the bread sampled from the bakery shops where consumers bought their daily bread.
A survey was carried out from 1983 to 1994 to determine the natural occurrence of aflatoxins and zearalenone in maize samples from Buenos Aires and Santa Fe provinces, Argentina. Among 2271 samples analysed, 1214 (53.5%) were contaminated with mycotoxins. Aflatoxin B1 was identified in 445 samples (19.6%), aflatoxin B2 was identified in 92 samples (4.1%) and zearalenone was identified in 676 samples (29.8%). Aflatoxin G1 was detected in only one sample and none of the samples contained detectable amounts of aflatoxin G2. Aflatoxin contamination was not detected in the 1988, 1993 and 1994 harvests and, in the other years, with the exception of 1989, the contamination levels were low. Zearalenone was found in every year.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.