Fortified Pasta With Cricket (Acheta domesticus) Powder: Impact of an Alternative Protein Source on Pasta Nutritional, Functional, and Technological Properties
Leonardo Musto, Mussa Makran, Dario Mercatante, Ivan Albano, Maria Teresa Rodriguez‐Estrada, Antonio Cilla, Guadalupe Garcia‐Llatas

TL;DR
This study explores using cricket powder in pasta to improve nutrition and sustainability, finding it lowers starch digestion and boosts protein and antioxidants.
Contribution
The first assessment of cricket powder's impact on pasta digestion kinetics and antioxidant bioaccessibility using a simulated gastrointestinal model.
Findings
Cricket-enriched pasta showed lower starch hydrolysis (61.5%) and higher resistant starch (38.5%) compared to wheat pasta.
Enriched pasta had increased protein, lipids, dietary fiber, and minerals, with higher antioxidant capacity post-digestion.
No significant changes in water absorption or cooking loss, but color was notably darker (ΔE Lab of 19.34).
Abstract
Global population growth is challenging the sustainability of current food systems and driving the search for alternative protein sources with lower environmental impact. The house cricket (Acheta domesticus) has emerged as a promising, sustainable provider of high‐quality protein. This study assessed, for the first time, starch hydrolysis kinetics and antioxidant capacity of penne rigate pasta formulated with 10% cricket powder versus 100% durum wheat pasta after a simulated gastrointestinal digestion model (INFOGEST 2.0). Glucose release was monitored throughout digestion, whereas antioxidant capacity was evaluated in raw and cooked pasta, as well as in bioaccessible and non‐bioaccessible fractions, using oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC), Trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity (TEAC), and Folin–Ciocalteu assays. Nutritional composition and technological properties were also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsect Utilization and Effects · Food composition and properties · Food Drying and Modeling
