Ditching Gluten: From Bland to Grand

Gluten is a protein substance found in cereal grains that is not digested easily. It is also an exceptionally versatile substance: It contributes texture, volume, and mouthfeel to food, providing elasticity and chewiness. Besides this, gluten also serves as a binding agent helping ingredients stick together. In addition, it is of high nutritional value in human diets.

Gluten Intolerances: When Bread becomes your Worst Enemy

A significant number of people suffer from some sort of intolerance to the protein gluten. There are basically three kinds of intolerance:

  • Celiac disease, which is a disease of the autoimmune system
  • Wheat allergy, which is an allergy to gluten
  • Gluten sensitivity, or non-celiac wheat sensitivity (NCWS)

Gluten isn’t easy to avoid in your diet. It is almost in everything made of wheat and most grains. We eat it in bread, pasta, cakes, couscous, sausages, processed meat, and even drinks like beer contain it. To top it off, most vegan meat alternatives contain even more gluten than the meat products they’re imitating.

The University of Hohenheim's research concerns itself with gluten as a protein with amazing properties that make it such a great food ingredient. Yet, they are also researching its negative aspects that are causing intolerances and health problems in people.

To get to the heart of the problem, scientists from the University of Hohenheim and from other institutions as well as the industrial sector have set up interdisciplinary projects. One is called INDICATE FH, which is short for Improving diagnostics and therapy of food hypersensitivity. Researchers from the fields of allergology, gastroenterology, clinical nutrition, natural sciences, and informatics join their forces to upgrade knowledge and skills in order to ameliorate the lives of people with gluten intolerance.

The Hohenheim path in this project is: Let's find new specific biomarkers and better practical diagnostic procedures using all available methods like bioinformatics, genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics to study patients’ mucosal tissue, saliva, and stool samples.

Improving diagnostics is one thing, but what people affected by gluten intolerance long for is to live a life as normal as possible. So far, the only cure for them is to avoid products containing gluten. But gluten-free food often lacks the frothiness and mouthfeel that the same food with gluten has. The research question therefore is which interfacial properties of gluten are responsible for the production of froth? Are there ways to imitate these characteristics with alternative ingredients or different properties?
Good to know
  • The project INDICATE FH is an interdisciplinary project. The University of Hohenheim is working along with other researchers in Germany from the University of Luebeck and the Research Center Borstel.
  • Hohenheim research is done by Prof. Dr. Stephan C. Bischoff from the Institute of Clinical Nutrition and Prof. Dr. Florian Fricke from the Department of Microbiome and Applied Bioinformatics
  • The project is sponsored by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research.
It is alarming that about one-third of the European population now complains of food intolerances, although it is often unclear what is behind them. The interdisciplinary consortium can help to shed light on the subject.

Prof. Dr. Stephan C. Bischoff, Institute of Clinical Nutrition, University of Hohenheim

Breaking bread, or: Finding the perfect bite

Have you ever eaten a piece of gluten-free bread? You might have noticed that it doesn’t have the bread texture that you are used to. Take the gluten from bread and it loses its “glutinousness” (mark the word), which means its viscosity, and its volume. The gluten-free bread has lost its chewy structure because the gluten network holds the carbon dioxide bubbles that are generated through the fermentation process. Without the gluten network, the gasses escape and the dough slumps.

What the University of Hohenheim, and in fact, the world, is looking for is a substance or a process that imitates what the gluten network does.
Good to knowIn the EU, “gluten-free” food still can hold up to 20 milligrams of gluten per kilogram of food.

By doing this, we cannot forget the nutritive value and the taste of the new gluten-free product! Gluten in food provides us with essential amino acids. The University of Hohenheim's gluten research therefore has two objectives in mind: joining healthy and beneficial gluten-free ingredients with an end-product that tastes like heaven.

Time to bake bread!

To bake bread on an industrial scale, you need a bakery line.

The University of Hohenheim is situated in and around the charming Hohenheim Palace on a hill in the south of Stuttgart, Germany. There’s not a lot of space on our hill, so we have the world’s smallest bakery line – although we have to admit we haven’t measured them all. The bread loaves from the line weigh only about 10 grams.

Our scientists use the bakery line to bake test bread loaves made from various gluten-free doughs. But what do they use to replace the gluten? They focus on saponins, among other possibilities.

Saponins are a promising protein alternative and are plant-based. They have the ability to produce a soapy lather when mixed with water and agitated, and that is where the name comes from (saponin is the Latin word for soap).

Hm, soap in food? Well, of course it’s not soap itself but the ability to froth that is the interesting part of saponins. The variety of saponin that is used in the Hohenheim bakery line is extracted from quinoa and daisies.

Results so far show that saponins work quite well to produce the feel of bread. On top of that, the researchers gone master-bakers have done the trick: the saponin-breads look and taste like “real” bread!

Video: The world's smallest bakery line

Writing the history of science for tomorrow: Early career researchers are essential

Proteins are fascinating subjects for research with the potential to help solve many of today’s problems – from eliminating plastic waste to eradicating food shortages. Up-and-coming scientists demonstrate how vital student research is to discovering and developing new and innovative solutions.