| Literature DB >> 25213955 |
Joel G Waramboi1, Sandra Dennien2, Michael J Gidley3, Peter A Sopade4.
Abstract
The physicochemical and functional properties of flours from 25 Papua New Guinean and Australian sweetpotato cultivars were evaluated. The cultivars (white-, orange-, cream-, and purple-fleshed, and with dry matter, from 15 to 28g/100g), were obovate, oblong, elliptic, curved, irregular in shape, and essentially thin-cortexed (1-2mm). Flour yield was less than 90g/100g solids, while starch, protein, amylose, water absorption and solubility indices, as well as total sugars, varied significantly (p<0.05). Potassium, sodium, calcium, and phosphorus were the major minerals measured, and there were differences in the pasting properties, which showed four classes of shear-thinning and shear-thickening behaviours. Differential scanning calorimetry showed single-stage gelatinisation behaviour, with cultivar-dependent temperatures (61-84°C) and enthalpies (12-27J/g dry starch). Oval-, round- and angular-shaped granules were observed with a scanning electron microscope, while X-ray diffraction revealed an A-type diffraction pattern in the cultivars, with about 30% crystallinity. This study shows a wide range of sweetpotato properties, reported for the first time. CrownEntities:
Keywords: Crystallinity; Gelatinisation; Granule morphology; Minerals; Pasting; Physicochemical properties; Starch
Year: 2010 PMID: 25213955 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2010.12.077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514