“…Current commercial food applications of T. chuii in the EU through novel food approval have been limited to sauces, condiments and salts albeit at a very limited maximum permissible addition level of 250 mg/serving/d (AECOSAN, 2017). Several other genera of dried green and blue-green (cyanobacteria) microalgae, and even an unidentified species of Tetraselmis (Lafarga, 2019), have been evaluated as experimental ingredients in wheat bread making with a proliferation of interest in the last five years (Ak et al, 2016;Finney, Pomeranz, & Bruinsma, 1984;García-Segovia, Pagán-Moreno, Lara, & Martínez-Monzó, 2017;Graça, Fradinho, Sousa, & Raymundo, 2018;Lafarga, 2019;Sanjari, Sarhadi, & Shahdadi, 2018;Tertychnaya, Manzhesov, Andrianov, & Yakovleva, 2019). Wheat flour replacement with microalgae up to 10% w/w have been investigated (Ak et al, 2016;Finney et al, 1984) although most studies tended to add less (1-5%) and often as a direct addition rather than a substitution of wheat flour.…”