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Carbohydr Polym ; 94(1): 594-602, 2013 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23544579

ABSTRACT

Starch isolation methods can change their physico-chemical and functional characteristics hindering the establishment of a starch-food functionality relation. A simple high yield and soft isolation method was applied for chestnut (Castanea sativa Mill) starch consisting in steeping and fruit disintegration in a 25 mM sodium bisulfite solution and purification by sedimentation. Starch integrity, physico-chemical composition, morphology and functional properties were determined, being observed significant differences from previous described methods for chestnut starch isolation. The X-ray pattern was of B-type, with a degree of crystallinity ranging from 51% to 9%, dependent on the starch moisture content. The onset, peak, and conclusion gelatinization temperatures were 57.1°C, 61.9°C and 67.9°C, respectively. Total amylose content was 26.6%, and there was not found any evidence for lipid complexed amylose. Swelling power at 90°C was 19 g/g starch, and the amount of leached amylose was 78% of the total amylose content. Native chestnut starch presents a type B pasting profile similar to corn starch but with a lower gelatinization (56.1°C) and peak viscosity (79.5°C) temperatures, making native chestnut starch a potential technological alternative to corn starch, especially in application where lower processing temperatures are needed.


Subject(s)
Fagaceae/chemistry , Seeds/chemistry , Starch/chemistry , Absorption , Amylose/chemistry , Crystallization , Fagaceae/ultrastructure , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Seeds/ultrastructure , Solubility , Species Specificity , Starch/isolation & purification , Starch/ultrastructure , Viscosity
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