AI Article Synopsis

  • * Extracting lipids from the surface didn't change how starch gelatinizes but reduced the melting enthalpy of starch-lipid complexes by 33%, leading to less thick mixtures.
  • * Internal lipid extraction caused a significant increase in starch granule size (50%) and altered cooking behavior, moving from a bimodal to a single broad swelling pattern, while also reducing starch swelling at high temperatures.

Article Abstract

The influence of the lipid extraction process on both macroscopic and microscopic characteristics of nonwaxy rice starch gelatinization in excess water was examined. Surface lipids extraction did not change the thermodynamics of starch gelatinization but lead to a significant reduction (33%) in the enthalpy of starch-lipid complex melting at high temperature, resulting in less viscous dispersions. Internal lipid extraction using hot aqueous alcoholic solutions resulted in an irreversible increase in starch granule diameter (50% increase in D[4,3]) and a dramatic change in cooking characteristics of the starch. Instead of the bimodal swelling observed for native nonwaxy rice starch, only one broad transition in swelling, solubility, granule size, and viscosity was observed in the case of the totally defatted starch. While the total removal of lipids resulted in a slight increase in starch swelling at intermediate temperatures, the harshness of the process caused irreparable changes leading to notably lower swelling at high temperatures.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jf050937pDOI Listing

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