Infant Cereals: Current Status, Challenges, and Future Opportunities for Whole Grains
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Klerks, Michelle; Bernal, María José; Román, Sergio; Bodenstab, Stefan; Gil Hernández, Ángel; Sánchez Siles, Luis ManuelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Infant cereals Infant food Whole grains Complementary feeding Health
Date
2019-02-23Referencia bibliográfica
Klerks, M., Bernal, M. J., Roman, S., Bodenstab, S., Gil, A., & Sanchez-Siles, L. M. (2019). Infant Cereals: Current Status, Challenges, and Future Opportunities for Whole Grains. Nutrients, 11(2), 473.
Résumé
Infant cereals play an important role in the complementary feeding period. The aim of this
study was to review existing research about the quantity, type, and degree of infant cereal processing,
with a special focus on whole grain infant cereals. Accumulating evidence shows many benefits
of whole grain consumption for human health. Likewise, consumers are frequently linking the
term whole grains to healthiness and naturality, and sustainable food production becomes a more
important aspect when choosing an infant cereal brand. Whole grain cereals should be consumed as
early as possible, i.e., during infancy. However, there are several challenges that food manufacturers
are facing that need to be addressed. Recommendations are needed for the intake of whole grain
cereals for infants and young children, including product-labeling guidelines for whole grain foods
targeting these age stages. Another challenge is minimizing the higher contaminant content in
whole grains, as well as those formed during processing. Yet, the greatest challenge may be to drive
consumers’ acceptance, including taste. The complementary feeding period is absolutely key in
shaping the infant’s food preferences and habits; therefore, it is the appropriate stage in life at which
to introduce whole grain cereals for the acceptance of whole grains across the entire lifespan.