Characterisation of sweetpotato from Papua New Guinea and Australia: Physicochemical, pasting and gelatinisation properties.


Autoria(s): Waramboi, J.G.; Dennien, S.; Gidley, M.J.; Sopade, P.A.
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

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 28 g/100 g), were obovate, oblong, elliptic, curved, irregular in shape, and essentially thin-cortexed (1-2 mm). Flour yield was less than 90 g/100 g 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 degrees C) and enthalpies (12-27 J/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.

Identificador

Waramboi, J.G. and Dennien, S. and Gidley, M.J. and Sopade, P.A. (2011) Characterisation of sweetpotato from Papua New Guinea and Australia: Physicochemical, pasting and gelatinisation properties. Food Chemistry, 126 (4). pp. 1759-1770.

http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/2034/

Publicador

Elsevier

Relação

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2010.12.077

http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/2034/

Palavras-Chave #Root and tuber crops, Includes Kumara, potato, parsnip etc #Horticulture. Horticultural crops
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed