2014
DOI: 10.14355/ijast.2014.0204.01
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Optimization of Enzymatic Hydrolysis Parameters of Pigeon Pea for Better Recovery of Dhal

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Cited by 6 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…For example, Williams et al (1988) and Sangani et al (2014) required at least 90% of seeds to be "cooked," Kinyanjui et al (2015) required at least 80% of seeds to be "cooked," and Wani et al (in press) required "desirable softness" of all of the four to five seeds squashed. For example, Williams et al (1988) and Sangani et al (2014) required at least 90% of seeds to be "cooked," Kinyanjui et al (2015) required at least 80% of seeds to be "cooked," and Wani et al (in press) required "desirable softness" of all of the four to five seeds squashed.…”
Section: Direct Cooking Time Methodologies Basedmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For example, Williams et al (1988) and Sangani et al (2014) required at least 90% of seeds to be "cooked," Kinyanjui et al (2015) required at least 80% of seeds to be "cooked," and Wani et al (in press) required "desirable softness" of all of the four to five seeds squashed. For example, Williams et al (1988) and Sangani et al (2014) required at least 90% of seeds to be "cooked," Kinyanjui et al (2015) required at least 80% of seeds to be "cooked," and Wani et al (in press) required "desirable softness" of all of the four to five seeds squashed.…”
Section: Direct Cooking Time Methodologies Basedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some authors try to define their version of "cooked softness," such as "cooked if cotyledons yield to only slight pressure" (Jones and Boulter 1983), "cooked when the cotyledons were soft and free of graininess" (Vindiola 1986), "cooked when the dhal became soft enough to masticate" (Singh et al 1991;Sangani et al 2014), "soft enough with minimum pressure" (Sasikala et al 2011), and "cooked when the cotyledons disintegrated on pressing" (Kinyanjui et al 2015). Some authors try to define their version of "cooked softness," such as "cooked if cotyledons yield to only slight pressure" (Jones and Boulter 1983), "cooked when the cotyledons were soft and free of graininess" (Vindiola 1986), "cooked when the dhal became soft enough to masticate" (Singh et al 1991;Sangani et al 2014), "soft enough with minimum pressure" (Sasikala et al 2011), and "cooked when the cotyledons disintegrated on pressing" (Kinyanjui et al 2015).…”
Section: Direct Cooking Time Methodologies Basedmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Similar effects have been established for pulse hulling where an enzymatic pretreatment allows pulses, such as pigeon peas, to be separated into intact splits (Sangani, Patel, Davara, Antala, & Akbari, 2010).…”
mentioning
confidence: 77%