Effect of Sprouting on Biomolecular and Antioxidant Features of Common Buckwheat ( Fagopyrum esculentum ).
Sara Margherita BorgonoviElena ChiarelloFederica PasiniGianfranco PiconeSilvia MarzocchiFrancesco CapozziAlessandra BordoniAlberto BarbiroliAlessandra MartiStefania IamettiMattia Di NunzioPublished in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Buckwheat is a pseudo-cereal widely grown and consumed throughout the world. Buckwheat is recognized as a good source of nutrients and, in combination with other health-promoting components, is receiving increasing attention as a potential functional food. Despite the high nutritional value of buckwheat, a variety of anti-nutritional features makes it difficult to exploit its full potential. In this framework, sprouting (or germination) may represent a process capable of improving the macromolecular profile, including reducing anti-nutritional factors and/or synthesizing or releasing bioactives. This study addressed changes in the biomolecular profile and composition of buckwheat that was sprouted for 48 and 72 h. Sprouting increased the content of peptides and free-phenolic compounds and the antioxidant activity, caused a marked decline in the concentration of several anti-nutritional components, and affected the metabolomic profile with an overall improvement in the nutritional characteristics. These results further confirm sprouting as a process suitable for improving the compositional traits of cereals and pseudo-cereals, and are further steps towards the exploitation of sprouted buckwheat as a high-quality ingredient in innovative products of industrial interest.