@article{jfnr20164106,
author={{Oladeji, Alamu Emmanuel and Bussie, Maziya-Dixon and Ibironke, Popoola and Therese, Gondwe and David, Chikoye},
title={Nutritional Evaluation and Consumer Preference of Legume Fortified Maize-meal Porridge},
journal={Journal of Food and Nutrition Research},
volume={4},
number={10},
pages={664--670},
year={2016},
url={http://pubs.sciepub.com/jfnr/4/10/6},
issn={2333-1240},
abstract={Maize-meal porridge is commonly consumed meal for the adults as breakfast food and for the children as complementary food. Food-to-food fortification was employed in order to improve the protein content of maize-meal porridge using soy flour and local groundnut paste. The study was aimed at evaluating the nutritional properties and consumer preference of the attributes of the unfortified porridge, legume-fortified porridge, and powdered milk-fortified porridge. The influence of consumers¡¯ knowledge of the type of fortificant added to the porridge was also investigated. Soy-fortified porridges provide comparable ash, crude fibre and fat contents to powdered milk- fortified porridge but with higher protein than powdered milk-fortified porridge. Soy flour raised the protein and ash content of the porridge by 90% and 63% respectively, the groundnut paste raised the protein and ash content by 88% and 41% and the powdered milk by 87% and 65% respectively. The unfortified porridge was the least preferred while the milk-fortified porridge was the most preferred. There was no significant difference between preference for some of the attributes of the groundnut paste fortified-porridge and the soy flour-fortified. There was no significant difference between consumption intent for the soy flour and groundnut paste -fortified porridge. Soy-fortified porridges provide comparable ash, crude fibre and fat contents to powdered milk- fortified porridge but with higher protein than powdered milk-fortified porridge. Soy-flour has shown to be a good substitute for powdered milk as a protein-fortificant for porridge and soy-fortified porridge could be a possible means of alleviating Protein-energy malnutrition among low income populations.},
doi={10.12691/jfnr-4-10-6}
publisher={Science and Education Publishing}
}
