Current location:home page > Food News

DFRL focuses on adding high nutritional ingredients into bakery products

admin2 days agoFood News6
Efforts are also on to add stevia which is a more healthy substitute and sweeter than sugar. The ref…
Efforts are also on to add stevia which is a more healthy substitute and sweeter than sugar. The refined stevia extracts are considered to be non-caloric. 

For the dietary fibre along with protein supplementation to the baked products, different oils like soy bean, peanut or coconut are also being utilised. Virgin coconut oil-based biscuits are one the recent developments made by us, stated Dr Bawa. 

But the use of ingredients in bakery products should be used with caution. This is because, there is considerable concern on the use of melamine. The Food and Drugs Administration (FDA) has detected melamine and cyanuric acid in a number of products that contain milk or milk-derived ingredients like biscuits, cakes and buns. Hence it is of utmost concern that the bakery products should be formulated using such major and minor ingredients which will supplement maximum nutrition and functionality keeping the viability of cost for the common consumer, he said. 

The bakery industry in India is the largest of the food industries. The country is the second largest producer of biscuits after the USA. The biscuit industry in India comprises of organised and unorganised sectors. Bread and biscuits form the major baked foods accounting for over 80 per cent of the total bakery products in the country. 

The quantities of and biscuits produced are more or less the same. However, value of biscuits is more than bread. The industry has traditionally being and largely continues to be in the unorganised sector contributing over 70 per cent of the total production, stated Dr Bawa. 

The bakery industry has earned approximately $278 million during 2010-2011. According to various reports, the annual production including bread, biscuits, pastries, cakes and buns was to the tune of three million tonnes. Bread alone had a market of 1.5 million tonnes. Reduced profit was the main challenge of the organised bread production sector. The rising prices of main ingredients like sugar, edible oil, milk and wheat flour had contributed to the falling profits, said Dr Bawa. 

Related articles

Burger King in talks to buy Canada's Tim Hortons

Burger King is in talks to acquire Canadian coffee and doughnut chain Tim Hortons Inc in a deal that…

Fresh or chilled asparagus account for half of Peru's air shipments

According to the Peruvian Foreign Trade Society (Comex Peru), Peru exported 74,774 tons of agricultu…

McDonald's, Taco Bell, KFC laggards in U.S. fast-food survey

Fast-food titans McDonald's, Taco Bell and KFC are conquering the globe, but they are losing to the…

McDonald's Thompson discusses slipping July results

Global comparable sales for McDonald's Corporation slipped 2.5 percent in July. Sales for the US wer…

McDonald's testing bananas as Happy Meal addition

McDonald's is testing 5.5 to 7 inch "junior" bananas in its Happy Meals in the Austin, Texas, market…

Nestlé, R&R form ice cream, frozen food joint venture

 Nestlé S.A., Switzerland, and R&R, a UK-based ice cream processor, created Froneri, a joint ven…