4.5 Article

Modification of the functional properties of hard-to-cook cowpea seed flours and cooked prepared pastes by γ-irradiation

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER INDIA
DOI: 10.1007/s13197-020-04509-z

Keywords

Cowpeas; Gamma-irradiation; Hard-to-cook defect; Pasting properties; Nitrogen solubility index

Funding

  1. University of Pretoria

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Gamma-irradiation has the potential to improve the quality of hard-to-cook cowpeas by disinfecting, reducing cooking time, and reversing some adverse effects caused by the hard-to-cook defect.
Cowpeas are an inexpensive source of quality protein but their utilisation is limited by long seed cooking time. This is exacerbated by development of the hard-to-cook (HTC) defect, which also adversely affects starch and protein functionality. Gamma-irradiation can eliminate cowpea seed insect infestation and affects seed functional properties, including reducing cooking time. Hence, the potential of gamma-irradiation to modify the starch- and protein-related functionalities of HTC cowpeas was investigated. Gamma-irradiation at approximately 11 kGy was applied to the seeds of two cowpea varieties, differing in HTC susceptibility, where HTC had been induced by high-temperature, high-humidity (HTHH) storage. HTHH storage increased flour pasting peak viscosity by up to 40% in the less susceptible variety and by more than 100% in the more susceptible variety. Gamma-irradiation at least completely reversed this effect, due to starch depolymerisation and debranching. Gamma-irradiation also positively impacted on some protein-related properties adversely affected by HTC; partially reversing the reduction in flour and cooked paste nitrogen solubility index of the HTC-susceptible cowpea, as a result of protein depolymerisation. The multiple benefits of gamma-irradiation: disinfection, cooking time reduction and reversing some adverse effects of HTC on functional properties could make it a viable process for improving HTC cowpea quality.

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