4.1 Article

Characterization of Native and Oxidized Starches of Two Varieties of Peruvian Carrot (Arracacia xanthorrhiza, B.) From Two Production Areas of Parana State, Brazil

Journal

BRAZILIAN ARCHIVES OF BIOLOGY AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 3, Pages 701-713

Publisher

INST TECNOLOGIA PARANA
DOI: 10.1590/S1516-89132009000300022

Keywords

Peruvian carrot varieties; starch; hydrogen peroxide; technological properties

Categories

Funding

  1. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPq)
  2. Fundacao Araucaria

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Two commercial varieties of Peruvian carrot ('Amarela de Caranda' and 'Senador Amaral') were processed into flour, starch and bagasse and chemically evaluated. The starch was extracted, modified with H2O2 and characterized by the physicochemical methods. By using the methylene blue dyeing, the granules of the modified starches showed intense blue color. The carboxyl content, the reducing power and the amount of the water liberated from the pastes after the freeze-thawing were higher for the oxidized starches and their pastes were clearer than those of the native starches of the two varieties from the two production areas. The RVA viscoamylography showed that the modified starches had lower viscosities with differences between the varieties. In the thermal analysis, the temperatures of the pyrolysis were higher for the native (310.37, 299.08, 311.18 degrees C) than for the modified starches (294.16, 296.65 e 293.29 degrees C) for both the varieties. This difference could be related with the larger surface of the granules due to the partial degradation promoted by the chemical modification. In almost all results, the differences were evident between the varieties but not for the cultivation places.

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