4.5 Article

Effect of amylose/amylopectin ratio and extent of processing on the physical properties of expanded maize starches

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 4, Pages 2298-2309

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ijfs.15581

Keywords

Amylose/amylopectin ratio; bubble growth; expansion; high temperature RVA; popping; starch conversion; thermomechanical extrusion

Funding

  1. EPSRC [EP/R512321/1]
  2. Real World Business Solutions Ltd
  3. Biopolymer Solutions Ltd.

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Low-density expanded starchy products are popular in the snack food industry. However, this study challenges the expected relationships between shear and different starches' potential to expand, as it found that despite marked differences in shear regime history and the major variations in the amylose and amylopectin ratios, all popped samples had similar densities.
Low-density expanded starchy products are often desirable, particularly in the snack food industry. Levels of shear and amylose are often deemed crucial factors for expansion. In this study, maize starches containing low (waxy), normal and high levels of amylose were compared after processing. Low shear processing used a popping head (similar to a rice-cake machine), while high shear (similar to 450 kJ kg(-1)) samples (pellets and directly expanded) were created using twin-screw thermomechanical extrusion. Native starches and ground extruded materials (<106 mu m) were popped using the same conditions (230 degrees C, 4 s, water content 12% wwb). All samples tested created fused aerated cakes, which had little or no remaining crystallinity, except for the directly popped waxy sample, which retained similar to 17% of its original crystallinity. Water absorbances and solubilities were influenced greatly by the starch source and marginally by the amount of processing. On processing, waxy samples showed increased solubility while those with normal amylose content had greater absorption. The densities of all the popped samples were similar despite marked differences in shear regime history and the major variations in the amylose and amylopectin ratios. These results challenge the expected relationships between shear and different starches' potential to expand.

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