Dextrin, sugar and organic acid profiles of spontaneous and modified gowe: a malted and fermented sorghum beverage from Benin
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Abstract
Gowe is a traditional Beninese fermented red sorghum beverage made from a blend of malted and precooked
nonmalted flour. The main objective of this work was to evaluate the degradation of starch during
the production of gowe and to characterise the organic acid and sugar profiles of the product obtained using
starter cultures. Inoculation was performed with strains of Lactobacillus fermentum or Weissella confusa
and of Kluyveromyces marxianus or Pichia anomala used singly or in combination. Size exclusion chromatography
revealed that starch was hydrolysed into high molecular weight dextrins (DP over 35), oligosaccharides
and glucose, mainly due to the malting and precooking steps. Glucose was the main free sugar, and
lactic acid was the main organic acid. The choice of the inoculation strain directly influenced the acidity but
also indirectly the sugar content of the resulting gowe and will thus affect consumer acceptability.
