Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Effect of Lime on Gelatinization of Corn Flour and Starch

130

Citations

11

References

1997

Year

Abstract

ABSTRACT Analysis of swelling power, water retention capacity, and degree of gelatinization of corn flour cooked in water with and without lime indicated, over a concentration range of 0–1% (w/v), that at low concentrations, lime increases swelling and digestibility of starch granules. Measurement of starch solubility revealed an increase in the amount of starch dissolved by lime cooking. Swelling, retention, and gelatinization exhibited maxima at or near 0.2% (w/v) lime, and then decreased as lime concentration increased. Hot‐stage polarized light microscopy and differential scanning calorimetry of isolated starch revealed increasing gelatinization temperatures with increasing lime concentrations. It is hypothesized that the high pH of the system causes starch hydroxyl groups to ionize, thereby creating binding sites for Ca ++ /CaOH + and producing Ca‐starch crosslinks. It is also suggested that, at low lime levels (<0.4%, w/v), granule crystalline regions are disrupted and the granule matrix is stretched by exchange of protons for calcium ions; when the lime level surpasses 0.4% (w/v), the granule shell becomes stabilized by Ca ++ ‐starch interactions, producing stronger, more rigid granules.

References

YearCitations

Page 1