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Dry Beans and Pulses: Production, Processing and Nutrition

ISBN: 978-0-813-82387-4

November 2012

Wiley-Blackwell

408 pages

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Description

The common beans and pulses are diverse food resources of high nutritional value (protein, energy, fiber and vitamins and minerals) with broad social acceptance. These legume crops demonstrate global adaptability, genotypic and phenotypic diversity, and multiple means of preparation and dietary use.  Beans and pulses are produced in regions as diverse as Latin America, Africa, Asia, and North America, and on a scale similar to some other crops, such as wheat, corn, rice and soybeans.

Numerous factors influence utilization, including bean type and cultivar selection, cropping environment and systems, storage conditions and handling infrastructure, processing and final product preparation.  Nutrient content and bio-availability are dramatically influenced by these conditions.  In recent years, beans and pulses have been cited for imparting specific positive health potentiating responses, such as hypocholesteremic response, mitigation of diabetes and colonic cancer, and weight control. Enhanced dry bean utilization focused on improved dietary health is an opportunity within both subsistent and developed populations.

This book provides a contemporary source of information that brings together current knowledge and practices in the value chain of beans/pulses production, processing, and nutrition.  It provides in-depth coverage of a wide variety of pertinent topics including: breeding, postharvest technologies, composition, processing technologies, food safety, quality, nutrition, and significance in human health.  An experienced team of over 25 contributors from North America, Asia, and Africa has written 15 chapters, divided into three sections:

  • Overview, production and postharvest technologies of beans and pulses
  • Composition, value-added processing and quality
  • Culinology, nutrition, and significance in human health

Contributors come from a field of diverse disciplines, including crop sciences, food science and technology, food biochemistry, food engineering, nutritional sciences, and culinology. Dry Beans and Pulses Production, Processing and Nutrition is an essential resource for scientists, processors and nutritionists, whatever the work setting.

About the Author

Muhammad Siddiq, PhD, is Visiting Associate Professor in the Department of Food Science & Human Nutrition, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA. His area of expertise is post-harvest physiology and value-added processing of fruits and vegetables and other plant-based commodities. Some of his recent publications and presentations have been on dry beans research and development. He is one of the editors of the International Journal of Food Properties and is one of the associate editors for the Handbook of Vegetables and Vegetable Processing (Wiley-Blackwell, 2011).

 

Mark A. Uebersax, Michigan State University, East Lansing , USA

 

Kirk D. Dolan, PhD, is Associate Professor of Food Engineering with joint appointments in the Department of Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering and the Department of Food Science & Human Nutrition, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA. His research is in the area of value-added processing of plant products and nutraceuticals and inverse problems, and he teaches the FDA-approved Better Process Control School for acidified and low-acid foods. Many of his publications/presentations are related to dry beans research work.