IS 16309 : Part 1 : 2021/ISO 21415-1 : 2006 Wheat and Wheat Flour - Gluten Content Part 1 Determination of Wet Gluten by a Manual Method
New Standard from Last Update.
( Superseding IS 8162 : 1998 and IS 15470 : 2004 )
NATIONAL FOREWORD
This Indian Standard (Part 1) which is identical with 1SO 21415-1 : 2006 ‘Wheat and wheat flour - Gluten content - Part 1: Determination of wet gluten by a manual method’ issued by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) was adopted by the Bureau of Indian Standards on recommendation of the Foodgrains, Allied Products and Other Agricultural Produce Sectional Committee and approval of Food and Agriculture Division Council.
Earlier, this standard was published as IS 8162 : 1998/ISO 5531 : 1978 ‘Wheat flour - Method for determination of wet gluten’. ISO 21415-1 : 2006 together with ISO 21415-2 : 2006 has cancelled and replaced ISO 5531 : 1978, which has been technically revised.
This Indian Standard is published in several parts the other parts in this series are:
Part 2 Determination of wet gluten by mechanical means
Part 3 Determination of dry gluten from wet gluten by an oven drying method
Part 4 Determination of dry gluten from wet gluten by a rapid drying method
The method for determination of dry gluten is given in IS 15470 : 2004/ISO 6645 : 1981 ‘Wheat flour - Determination of dry gluten’. ISO 21415-3 : 2006 together with ISO 21415-4 : 2006 has cancelled and replaced ISO 6645 : 1981, which has been technically revised. Therefore, on the lines of ISO Standard, this standard is also published in four parts adopting corresponding parts of ISO 21415. Upon publication of these standards, IS 8162 : 1998 and IS 15470 : 2004 shall be treated as withdrawn.
The text of ISO Standard has been approved as suitable for publication as an Indian Standard without deviations. Certain terminologies and conventions are, however, not identical to those used in Indian Standards. Attention is particularly drawn to the following:
a) Wherever the words ‘International Standard’ appear referring to this standard, they should be read as ‘Indian Standard’.
b) Comma (,) has been used as a decimal marker, while in Indian Standards, the current practice is to use a point (.) as the decimal marker.