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African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development
Rural Outreach Program
ISSN: 1684-5358 EISSN: 1684-5358
Vol. 21, No. 3, 2021, pp. 17682-17695
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Bioline Code: nd21032
Full paper language: English
Document type: Research Article
Document available free of charge
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African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development, Vol. 21, No. 3, 2021, pp. 17682-17695
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QUALITY EVALUATION OF gari PRODUCED FROM PROVITAMIN A CASSAVA ( Manihot esculenta ) ENRICHED WITH AFRICAN YAM BEAN ( Sphenostylis stenocarpa )
Olatunde, SJ; Owoola, GO; Ajiboye, TS & Babarinde, GO
Abstract
Provitamin A cassava (PVAC), a biofortified yellow cassava, has great potential to
alleviate vitamin A deficiency in sub-Saharan Africa. Blending PVAC with an
underutilized legume, African Yam Bean (AYB), in gari production will go a long way
in reducing protein and vitamin A malnutrition problems in sub-Saharan Africa where
gari is a staple food. Gari was produced from PVAC mash substituted with varying
proportions (0, 7.5, 15, 23 and 30%) of AYB using simplex lattice design expert
(version 16.0). The gari samples were evaluated for their nutritional composition,
physicochemical properties and anti-nutritional factors. Sensory attributes of the
products were evaluated using a 7-point hedonic scale. Moisture contents of all the gari
samples were below 5% indicating safe level for prolonged storage. Substituting PVAC
with AYB at varying proportions resulted in 14.4-23.7%, 16.3-23.5%, 19.8-20.3% and
15.5-20.3% for ash, protein, calorific and beta-carotene contents, respectively, and
18.3–21.8% reduction in fiber content. Production of gari from blends of PVAC and
AYB significantly (p<0.05) increased pH level and reduced total titratable acidity of
the gari samples. Gari produced from 92.5% PVAC and 7.5% AYB mash had the least
value of 1.20 mg/kg HCN, and 100 % cassava gari had the highest value (5.0 mg/kg)
of HCN. The swelling capacity decreased with increase in the substitution level of
AYB in the mixture. The results of syneresis of the samples followed a similar trend
with that of swelling capacity. Water absorption capacity and reconstitution index
showed increase with increase in the level of AYB inclusion. The anti- nutritional
factor of the gari sample ranged from 1.95 to 5.65% for trypsin inhibitor, 4.53-31.02
mg/100g for total phenols, and 2.56-5.33 mg/100g for alkaloids. Gari produced from
100% PVAC was the most preferred in terms of colour, texture, aroma and appearance
while gari substituted with 7.5% AYB was best preferred in terms of taste. Significant
difference (p<0.05) was recorded for the overall acceptability attribute of 100% PVAC
gari (control sample) which was best rated by the panelists. It was concluded that a
substitution of 7.5% AYB into PVAC mash gave the gari with the best overall quality
acceptability. These findings indicated the potential of AYB in gari processing to curb
vitamin A deficiency among the vulnerable group.
Keywords
Gari; Vitamin A Deficiency; Provitamin A cassava; African yam bean
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