CLIC - Climate-smart grain crops – Functionalization of Sorghum milling fractions for application in European cereal based staple products
Abstract
As part of a holistic strategy, the potential of climate-smart grain crops - specifically sorghum - is to be identified and subsequently exploited facing the challenge of a sustainable feeding of the growing world population. This is only possible with high-yield and weather-tolerant agricultural raw materials. The focus must be on crops that emit low levels of greenhouse gas while being resilient to heat and drought. Until now, sorghum has not been used as an ingredient in staple foods in Central European countries. However, sorghum shows a high field yield and is drought tolerant. Therefore, bundled research activities and cooperation with corporate partners are needed to establish the use of sorghum as a major ingredient in Western diet and to develop sensory accepted and high nutritional food products. Sorghum is already used as a staple food in African and Indian regions. However, the functionality and sensory attributes of wholegrain sorghum products do not meet the cultural European quality expectations. There is still limited understanding of the functional behaviour of different sorghum milling fractions in bakery and pasta products. It is crucial to investigate the impact of different milling fractions on technological functionality as well as on nutritional and sensory properties. Then we can adapt and control the milling process for producing high quality sorghum fractions. Furthermore, the grain and the milling fractions are functionalized by several approaches such as germination, enzymatic and hydrothermal approaches to optimize and increase the functionality in terms of digestibility and gas holding properties. Thus, sorghum-based gluten-free breads and new 3D printed texturates as well as sorghum-wheat-based breads, fine bakery products and pasta of higher nutritional value and sensory acceptability can be produced from climate-smart grains in Europe. The CLIC consortium consists of experts in the field of food technology, cereal process engineering with many years of expertise in the field of alternative cereal crops, i.e. University of Hohenheim, BOKU and HTLLMT Wels. Due to the similar effects of climate change on cereal cultivation, Germany and Austria are equally in search of solutions. Through a transnational project, the necessary knowledge can be multiplied, and the corresponding work packages are distributed according to the expertise of the research partners. The project will be coordinated by FEI (Germany) and ecoplus (Austria). The user committee consists of branches along the value chain: milling, additive suppliers, consultants, bakery and pasta production and related associations.
- Sorghum
- Backwaren
- Teigwaren
- klimafreundliche Rohstoffe
Mitarbeiter*innen
Regine Schönlechner
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Regine Schönlechner
regine.schoenlechner@boku.ac.at
Tel: +43 1 47654-75240
Projektleiter*in
01.12.2023 - 28.02.2026
Lisa-Maria Call
Dipl.-Ing. Dr. Lisa-Maria Call
lisa.call@boku.ac.at
Tel: +43 1 47654-95714
Sub-Projektleiter*in
01.12.2023 - 14.10.2024
Denisse Bender
Dr.in Denisse Bender M.Sc.
denisse.bender@boku.ac.at
Tel: +43 1 47654-75437
Projektmitarbeiter*in
01.12.2023 - 28.02.2026
Eleonora Charlotte Pichler
Dipl.-Ing. Eleonora Charlotte Pichler
eleonora.pichler@boku.ac.at
Tel: +43 1 47654-75246
Projektmitarbeiter*in
01.12.2023 - 28.02.2026
BOKU Partner
Externe Partner
HTL LMT Wels
Dir. Gisela Wenger-Öhn
Partner
ecoplus. Niederösterreichs Wirtschaftsagentur GmbH
Mag. Sigrid Meischl
Partner