Amylose, rheological and functional properties of yellow cassava flour as affected by pretreatment and drying methods

This study reconnoitered the effects of preservative treatments (0.3% Sodium Metabisulphite solution (SMS); and 0.3% Citric Acid solution (CAS)) and drying methods (flash- and cabinet-drying) on the rheological profile, amylose and functional properties of flour from yellow-fleshed cassava varieties...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ekeledo, E., Latif, S., Abass, A., Muller, J.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/130324
_version_ 1855520101085741056
author Ekeledo, E.
Latif, S.
Abass, A.
Muller, J.
author_browse Abass, A.
Ekeledo, E.
Latif, S.
Muller, J.
author_facet Ekeledo, E.
Latif, S.
Abass, A.
Muller, J.
author_sort Ekeledo, E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This study reconnoitered the effects of preservative treatments (0.3% Sodium Metabisulphite solution (SMS); and 0.3% Citric Acid solution (CAS)) and drying methods (flash- and cabinet-drying) on the rheological profile, amylose and functional properties of flour from yellow-fleshed cassava varieties. Four preservative-treated flour samples (Sodium Metabisulphite cabinet-dried (SMC); Sodium Metabisulphite flash-dried (SMF); Citric Acid cabinet-dried (CAC); and Citric Acid flash-dried (CAF) were evaluated. The rheological profile (peak, breakdown, setback and final viscosity) of flash-dried samples treated with sodium metabisulphite exhibited the highest values (891 RVU, 586 RVU, 208 RVU and 513 RVU) respectively. The cabinet-dried samples treated with citric acid had the least peak, trough and final viscosity of 497 RVU, 211 RVU and 326 RVU respectively. The flash-dried flour samples had the highest values for water absorption capacity while cabinet-dried (CAC) flour samples had the highest dispersibility. Therefore, flash-dried flour samples are more likely suited for food formulations requiring good pasting quality and moderately high gel strength.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace130324
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1303242025-01-24T14:12:27Z Amylose, rheological and functional properties of yellow cassava flour as affected by pretreatment and drying methods Ekeledo, E. Latif, S. Abass, A. Muller, J. preservatives seed treatment drying cassava viscosity amylose This study reconnoitered the effects of preservative treatments (0.3% Sodium Metabisulphite solution (SMS); and 0.3% Citric Acid solution (CAS)) and drying methods (flash- and cabinet-drying) on the rheological profile, amylose and functional properties of flour from yellow-fleshed cassava varieties. Four preservative-treated flour samples (Sodium Metabisulphite cabinet-dried (SMC); Sodium Metabisulphite flash-dried (SMF); Citric Acid cabinet-dried (CAC); and Citric Acid flash-dried (CAF) were evaluated. The rheological profile (peak, breakdown, setback and final viscosity) of flash-dried samples treated with sodium metabisulphite exhibited the highest values (891 RVU, 586 RVU, 208 RVU and 513 RVU) respectively. The cabinet-dried samples treated with citric acid had the least peak, trough and final viscosity of 497 RVU, 211 RVU and 326 RVU respectively. The flash-dried flour samples had the highest values for water absorption capacity while cabinet-dried (CAC) flour samples had the highest dispersibility. Therefore, flash-dried flour samples are more likely suited for food formulations requiring good pasting quality and moderately high gel strength. 2023-12 2023-05-11T08:32:38Z 2023-05-11T08:32:38Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/130324 en Limited Access Elsevier Ekeledo, E., Latif, S., Abass, A. & Müller, J. (2023). Amylose, rheological and functional properties of yellow cassava flour as affected by pretreatment and drying methods. Food and Humanity, 1, 57-63.
spellingShingle preservatives
seed treatment
drying
cassava
viscosity
amylose
Ekeledo, E.
Latif, S.
Abass, A.
Muller, J.
Amylose, rheological and functional properties of yellow cassava flour as affected by pretreatment and drying methods
title Amylose, rheological and functional properties of yellow cassava flour as affected by pretreatment and drying methods
title_full Amylose, rheological and functional properties of yellow cassava flour as affected by pretreatment and drying methods
title_fullStr Amylose, rheological and functional properties of yellow cassava flour as affected by pretreatment and drying methods
title_full_unstemmed Amylose, rheological and functional properties of yellow cassava flour as affected by pretreatment and drying methods
title_short Amylose, rheological and functional properties of yellow cassava flour as affected by pretreatment and drying methods
title_sort amylose rheological and functional properties of yellow cassava flour as affected by pretreatment and drying methods
topic preservatives
seed treatment
drying
cassava
viscosity
amylose
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/130324
work_keys_str_mv AT ekeledoe amyloserheologicalandfunctionalpropertiesofyellowcassavaflourasaffectedbypretreatmentanddryingmethods
AT latifs amyloserheologicalandfunctionalpropertiesofyellowcassavaflourasaffectedbypretreatmentanddryingmethods
AT abassa amyloserheologicalandfunctionalpropertiesofyellowcassavaflourasaffectedbypretreatmentanddryingmethods
AT mullerj amyloserheologicalandfunctionalpropertiesofyellowcassavaflourasaffectedbypretreatmentanddryingmethods