Nutritional Upgrading and Climate Change Mitigation in Fresh Pasta via Co-Fortification with Cricket Powder and Riceberry Flour
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Title Nutritional Upgrading and Climate Change Mitigation in Fresh Pasta via Co-Fortification with Cricket Powder and Riceberry Flour
Creator Kodchasorn Hussaro
Contributor Jutiporn Intanin, Chermdhong Prattanaruk, Pornariya Chirinang, Alisa Rungrueangsri, Atchariya satkuson
Publisher Rajamangala University of Technology Rattanakosin
Publication Year 2569
Keyword cricket powder, fresh pasta, riceberry flour, dietary fibre
Abstract 1. In this study, fresh pasta made from refined wheat was reformulated by replacing 0, 5, 10, and 15% (w/w) of the flour with house-cricket (Acheta domesticus) powder. In comparison, riceberry rice flour was kept constant at 5%. Increasing cricket content decreased aw from 0.948 ? 0.003 to 0.931 ? 0.002 and lowered moisture from 32.83 ? 0.10% to 31.95 ? 0.09%. However, protein content increased from 11.30 ? 0.46% to 15.93 ? 0.25%, and dietary fiber grew from 2.26 ? 0.06% to 2.73 ? 0.04%. The product color changed from pale yellow (L* 80.03) to muted purple-brown (L* 68.73), yet cooking loss stayed below 4% in all samples, indicating no technological drawbacks. All formulations met international thresholds for fresh pasta concerning dry matter (? 68%), protein (? 8% d.b.), and safety (aw < 0.95)
2. blends with ? 5% cricket qualified for the EU/ASEAN “source of protein” claim. A cradle-to-factory-gate screening-LCA revealed that replacing 15% of wheat flour with cricket powder plus 5% riceberry flour reduced the dough’s carbon footprint from 1.30 to 1.21 kg CO?-eq per kg—a 6.9% reduction in GHG emissions—while a 10% cricket substitution resulted in a 5.4% decrease. On a per-ton basis, the 15% formulation would avoid approximately 90 kg CO?-eq per ton compared to traditional wheat pasta, excluding additional credits from insect frass valorization. Sensitivity analysis (?25% emission factor variation) confirmed a robust savings range of 3–10%. Overall, the results demonstrate that co-fortifying fresh pasta with up to 15% cricket powder and 5% riceberry flour produces a product that is microbiologically safer, higher in protein, and richer in fiber, while reducing cradle-to-grave GHG emissions by about 7%. Thus, this approach offers a scalable pathway to incorporate edible insects and pigmented rice coproducts into premium chilled pasta lines, supporting circular bioeconomy initiatives and climate change mitigation efforts.
ISBN 978-616-8387-06-1
Language EN
URL Website https://www.rmutr.ac.th/
Website title Rajamangala University of Technology Rattanakosin
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