Dry Beans and Pulses Production, Processing, and Nutrition. Группа авторов
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СКАЧАТЬ Small red 1,300–2,000 Yellow 1,000–1750

      US standard sieves are used to screen beans for grade standard specifications. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) standards for dry beans (USDA 2017a) state that “well‐screened” beans “shall mean that the beans are uniform in size and are practically free from such small, shrivelled, underdeveloped beans, splits, broken beans, large beans, and foreign material that can be removed readily…through use of sieves.” Sieves are to be constructed of 0.319‐inch‐thick metal with perforated round holes. Sizes are specified as a 30/64 sieve (0.4687 inch on a 11/64‐inch center); a 28/64 sieve (0.4375 inch on 19/32‐inch center); and a 24/64 sieve (0.0319 inch on a 17/32‐inch center). All rows of perforations are to be staggered. The screening is conducted in commercial operations (see Chapter 4), and these sieve specifications are used during USDA grading procedures to the assess sample uniformity for size.

      Commercial market classes have characteristic seed shapes that range from spherical to elongated (e.g., navy beans are generally characterized by a small round seed whereas kidney beans have elongated seed that resemble the human kidney). Similar to seed size, seed shape is under genetic control; however, deviations may occur due to stressed growing conditions (i.e., water availability and temperature profiles throughout the growing season).

      Commercial classes are also characterized by their seed coat color. Seed coat color is defined by the pigmentation underlying the testa and may be distributed throughout the testa as a solid or mottled pattern. The appearance will range from glossy (shiny) to a matte (dull) finish. The glossy finish is associated with the presence of a lipid layer on the surface of the testa. The P locus is known as the ground factor for all seed coat color genotypes (Bassett 2007).

Schematic illustration of general classification of phenolic compounds.

      Source: Adapted from Luthria and Pastor‐Corrales (2006).

      In recent years, interest in the antioxidant capacity of plant foods and specifically the phenolic content of dry beans (Wu et al. 2004; Xu and Chang 2009; Giusti et al. 2019) has intensified. There is increasing evidence that flavonoids consumed in native foods convey health benefits in human diets through their antioxidant activity (Frankel et al. 1993; Hertog et al. 1993). Condensed and hydrolyzable tannins of high molecular weight also have been shown to be effective antioxidants with even greater activity than simple phenolics (e.g., flavonoid monomers) (Hagerman et al. 1998). Although exceptionally high levels of antioxidant capacity have been reported in raw dry beans (Wu et al. 2004), further work on the retention of these properties in prepared (cooked or canned) beans is warranted.

      The genetics of black bean pigmentation has been studied by various researchers and summarized by Hosfield (2001). Feenstra (1960) isolated 18 different compounds from 12 experimental lines. These pigment compounds were identified as anthocyanins, flavonol glycosides, and leucoanthocyanidins. The secondary plant metabolites known as flavonoids are water‐soluble phenolic compounds that possess the basic structural C15 skeleton of flavones. Beninger et al. (1998) reported that the pigments responsible for the wide variation in the color of bean seed coats are flavonoids.

      It is recognized that black beans possessing a shiny seed coat will imbibe less water and at a slower rate, resulting in less total pigment loss than beans with dull‐appearing seed coats. This characteristic is likely associated with polar‐phased (lipids/waxes) components deposited within the cuticle of the testa. For example, Shiny Crow, a distinctive black bean cultivar released by Colorado State University in 1999, possesses a brilliant glossy seed coat sheen and is particularly valued in the fresh market sector due to its deep black pigmentation. Black beans with the highest rates of water uptake were shown to have the highest rates of pigment loss (Raven, Black Jack and Black Magic) and had about 90% pigment loss compared to Shiny Crow and Shiny Harblack, with about 50% pigment loss. Thus, these data suggest that the opaque (dull) seed coat has the highest water uptake (rate and total quantity) and the greatest pigment loss compared to shiny‐coated cultivars (Bushey et al. 2000, Bushey and Hosfield 2007).

      Several soak‐water additives have demonstrated the ability to stabilize pigment СКАЧАТЬ