A review on physicochemical and thermorheological properties of sago starch

This study was a part of a research project aiming to investigate the texture characteristics of protein - starch interaction in fish based product keropok lekor. Accordingly, the current review study focused on some physicochemical (molecular weight, viscosity, chemical composition and swelling pow...

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Main Authors: Mohamed Saeed, Mohamed Abd Elgadir, Bakar, Jamilah, Abbas, Kassim Ali, Abdul Rahman, Russly, Karim, Roselina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Science Publications 2008
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12839/1/ajabssp.2008.639.646.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12839/
http://www.thescipub.com/abstract/?doi=ajabssp.2008.639.646
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spelling my.upm.eprints.128392017-11-20T08:24:16Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12839/ A review on physicochemical and thermorheological properties of sago starch Mohamed Saeed, Mohamed Abd Elgadir Bakar, Jamilah Abbas, Kassim Ali Abdul Rahman, Russly Karim, Roselina This study was a part of a research project aiming to investigate the texture characteristics of protein - starch interaction in fish based product keropok lekor. Accordingly, the current review study focused on some physicochemical (molecular weight, viscosity, chemical composition and swelling power) and thermorheological (gelatinization, retrogradation and viscoelsticity) characteristics of sago starch alone and in mixtures with other ingredients such as sucrose, salts and hydroclloids. The inferred outcome of this extensive survey revealed that the gelatinisation temperature for sago-water mixture ranged from 69.4-70.1°C which was low compared to sweet potato, tania and yam starches. The role of using hydrocolloids in starch-based foods was to control the rheological properties as well as modifying the texture of the products, enhaning or modifying the gelatinization and retrogradation behaviour and improving water-holding capacity of the system. In the presence of sucrose or sodium chloride, the gelatinisation temperatures of sago starch shifted to higher temperatures and its enthalpy decreased. The addition of salts caused an elevation or depression of gelatinization temperature and gelatinization enthalpy, depending on their types and concentrations used. However, sodium chloride appeared to exhibit a maximum inhibitory effect on starch gelatinisation at a concentration of 6-9%. Science Publications 2008 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12839/1/ajabssp.2008.639.646.pdf Mohamed Saeed, Mohamed Abd Elgadir and Bakar, Jamilah and Abbas, Kassim Ali and Abdul Rahman, Russly and Karim, Roselina (2008) A review on physicochemical and thermorheological properties of sago starch. American Journal of Agricultural and Biological Sciences, 3 (4). pp. 639-646. ISSN 1557-4989; ESSN: 1557-4997 http://www.thescipub.com/abstract/?doi=ajabssp.2008.639.646 10.3844/ajabssp.2008.639.646
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description This study was a part of a research project aiming to investigate the texture characteristics of protein - starch interaction in fish based product keropok lekor. Accordingly, the current review study focused on some physicochemical (molecular weight, viscosity, chemical composition and swelling power) and thermorheological (gelatinization, retrogradation and viscoelsticity) characteristics of sago starch alone and in mixtures with other ingredients such as sucrose, salts and hydroclloids. The inferred outcome of this extensive survey revealed that the gelatinisation temperature for sago-water mixture ranged from 69.4-70.1°C which was low compared to sweet potato, tania and yam starches. The role of using hydrocolloids in starch-based foods was to control the rheological properties as well as modifying the texture of the products, enhaning or modifying the gelatinization and retrogradation behaviour and improving water-holding capacity of the system. In the presence of sucrose or sodium chloride, the gelatinisation temperatures of sago starch shifted to higher temperatures and its enthalpy decreased. The addition of salts caused an elevation or depression of gelatinization temperature and gelatinization enthalpy, depending on their types and concentrations used. However, sodium chloride appeared to exhibit a maximum inhibitory effect on starch gelatinisation at a concentration of 6-9%.
format Article
author Mohamed Saeed, Mohamed Abd Elgadir
Bakar, Jamilah
Abbas, Kassim Ali
Abdul Rahman, Russly
Karim, Roselina
spellingShingle Mohamed Saeed, Mohamed Abd Elgadir
Bakar, Jamilah
Abbas, Kassim Ali
Abdul Rahman, Russly
Karim, Roselina
A review on physicochemical and thermorheological properties of sago starch
author_facet Mohamed Saeed, Mohamed Abd Elgadir
Bakar, Jamilah
Abbas, Kassim Ali
Abdul Rahman, Russly
Karim, Roselina
author_sort Mohamed Saeed, Mohamed Abd Elgadir
title A review on physicochemical and thermorheological properties of sago starch
title_short A review on physicochemical and thermorheological properties of sago starch
title_full A review on physicochemical and thermorheological properties of sago starch
title_fullStr A review on physicochemical and thermorheological properties of sago starch
title_full_unstemmed A review on physicochemical and thermorheological properties of sago starch
title_sort review on physicochemical and thermorheological properties of sago starch
publisher Science Publications
publishDate 2008
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12839/1/ajabssp.2008.639.646.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12839/
http://www.thescipub.com/abstract/?doi=ajabssp.2008.639.646
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score 13.160551