“…NDT ultrasound can be employed to evaluate microstructure and mechanical properties of materials, as well as to acquire information on microscopic inhomogeneities and discontinuities with no destruction of the test specimen (Shah & Ribakov, 2009;Wu, Jen, Kobayashi, & Blouin, 2011). An extensive use of lowintensity ultrasound to evaluate the mechanical properties of wheat flour doughs has been reported in the literature (Alava et al, 2007;Bellido & Hatcher, 2010;Daugelaite, Strybulevych, Scanlon, & Page, 2016;Elmehdi, Scanlon, Page, & Kovacs, 2013;Garc ıa-Alvarez, Salazar, & Rosell, 2011;Hatcher et al, 2014;Mehta, Scanlon, Sapirstein, & Page, 2009;Owolabi, Bassim, Page, & Scanlon, 2008;Peressini et al, 2017;Skaf, Nassar, Lefebvre, & Nongaillard, 2009). That is, the propagation of ultrasonic waves through food materials is affected by their structural and mechanical properties, that is, the speed and the energy of the ultrasound are changed due to its propagation through foods.…”