Adaptation of Conventional Wheat Flour Mill to Refine Sorghum, Corn, and Cowpea

Michael Joseph, Sajid Alavi, Akinbode A. Adedeji, Lijia Zhu, Jeff Gwirtz, Shawn Thiele

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (SciVal)

Abstract

This study evaluated the refinement of sorghum, corn, and cowpea grains using the processing steps and equipment originally designed for wheat milling that consists of a conventional gradual reduction system. The need to mill these grains resulted from a desire to produce alternative ingredients for developing new fortified blended extruded foods used for food aid programming. Milling of white sorghum grain resulted in a crude protein content of 7.4% (wb) for both whole and coarse-milled flour. The crude protein content in whole fine-milled sorghum was 6.8% (wb), which was significantly lower than that of whole coarse flour at 9.3% (wb). A decrease in the ash content of sorghum flour correlates with the decortication process. However, degermed corn, fine and coarse, had significantly different crude protein content of 6.0 ± 0.2% (wb) and 7.7 ± 0.06% (wb), respectively. Degerming of corn improved the quality of corn flour (fine and coarse) by reducing the crude fat content from 3.3 ± 0.18% (wb) to 1.2 ± 0.02% (wb) and 0.6 ± 0.13% (wb), respectively. This helped increase the starch content from 60.1 ± 0.28% (wb) in raw corn to 74.7 ± 0.93% (wb) and 71.8 ± 0.00% (wb) in degermed fine and coarse corn flour, respectively. Cowpea milling did not produce differences in the milling stream outputs when the crude fat and crude protein were compared. Whole flour from the grains had higher milling yields than decorticated flour. This study demonstrated that a mill dedicated to wheat size reduction can be adapted to refine other grains to high quality.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1959-1971
Number of pages13
JournalAgriEngineering
Volume6
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by the authors.

Keywords

  • corn
  • cowpea
  • fortified blended foods
  • milling
  • proximate content
  • sorghum
  • whole flours

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Food Science
  • Agronomy and Crop Science
  • Engineering (miscellaneous)
  • Horticulture

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