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Publication no. C-2002- 0801-01R
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ARTICLE
Modification of Starch by Dry Heating with Ionic Gums.
S.-T. Lim (1),
J.-A. Han (1), H. S. Lim (2), and J. N. BeMiller (2,3). (1) Graduate School of
Biotechnology, Korea University, Seoul 136-701, Korea. (2) Whistler Center for
Carbohydrate Research, 1160 Food Science Building, Purdue University, West
Lafayette, IN 47906. (3) Corresponding author. E-mail:
<bemiller@foodsci.purdue.edu> Cereal Chem. 79(5):601-606. Accepted February 26,
2002. Copyright 2002 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.
Waxy maize (native and hydroxypropylated [HP]) and potato starches were
impregnated with ionic gums (sodium alginate, CMC, and xanthan, 1% based on
starch solids) and heat-treated in a dry state for 0, 2, or 4 hr at 130°C.
Effects of the dry heating on paste viscosity (RVA) and clarity (light
transmittance) were examined. Heat treatment with sodium alginate and CMC raised
the paste viscosities of native and HP waxy maize starches, but decreased that
of potato starch. Xanthan provided the most substantial changes in paste
viscosity among the tested gums. It appeared to heavily restrict granule
swelling of the waxy maize starches, but it increased swelling of potato starch
granules. Dry heating raised the paste viscosity of all the starch-gum mixtures
tested, except the potato starch-alginate mixture. The final viscosity at 50°C
of a 7% paste was raised in all other starches by approximately 500-1,000 cP by this
treatment. The paste of waxy maize starch-gum products became opaque and shorter
textured by the heat treatment, regardless of the gum type, whereas potato
starch-gum products did not show any obvious change in paste clarity. Ionic gums
could behave as cross-linking agents as well as form graft copolymers through
heat-induced ester formation. This simple heating process with ionic gums could
be used as a modification method for starch.
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