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Use of flour from cormels of Xanthosoma sagittifolium (L.) Schott and Colocasia esculenta (L.) Schott to develop pastes foods: Physico-chemical, functional and nutritional characterization. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cormels from cocoyams (Colocasia esculenta and Xanthosoma sagittifolium) are typically underutilized despite their potential, as they are often consumed as pastes.
  • The study found that Colocasia spp. flour has higher protein, ash, and oxalate content but lower gel strength compared to Xanthosoma spp. flour, influencing the properties of the resulting pastes.
  • Colocasia spp. pastes exhibit better stability over time and lower glycemic index, suggesting they could be used to develop more nutritious cocoyam-based foods.

Article Abstract

The corms of cocoyams, specifically Colocasia esculenta (L.) Schott and Xanthosoma sagittifolium (L.) Schott are usually consumed as pastes. Nevertheless, the secondary corms, also named cormels, are not fully exploited. In this study, the chemical composition and functional properties of cormels from different botanical sources were evaluated, and the digestibility of the resulting pastes investigated. Colocasia spp. flour contained significantly higher protein (10.32% vs 9.65%), ash (5.65% vs 5.05%) and oxalates (0.32% vs 0.22%) content, and exhibited lower Amylab gel strength (773 g vs 1040 g) than Xanthosoma spp. flour. In the resulting pastes, micrographs revealed that starch gelatinization depended on cocoyam variety. Indeed, the very tight and closed microstructure of pastes containing Colocasia spp. flour led them to better stability during storage with lower syneresis. Lower protein digestibility was obtained in Colocasia spp. gels (67.56% vs 70.91%), but they showed faster (higher k) in vitro starch hydrolysis (0.0140 vs 0.0050) with lower estimated glycemic index (61.29 vs 65.84) than Xanthosoma spp. gels. The present findings offer ways to develop cocoyam based foods by using cormels, enhancing the applicability of cocoyams.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2020.128666DOI Listing

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