Abstract

ABSTRACTSweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) is a commonly cultivated root crop in tropical and subtropical regions, including Ghana. Different varieties of sweet potato have been bred, in order to expand its utilisation within the food and industrial sector. This study analysed flours made from 12 recently developed Ghanaian sweet potato varieties in terms of their amylose and amylopectin molecular fractions and amylopectin chain length distribution. Starch content of the sweet potato flours ranged from 49 to 77 g/100 g dry matter, with 11 of the varieties containing above 60 g/100 g dry matter. An orange-fleshed variety, Apomuden, had the lowest amount of starch (48.9 g/100 g dry matter), while the cream-fleshed variety Histarch had the highest (77.3 g/100 g dry matter). The flours from the 12 sweet potato varieties had intermediate amounts of amylose, within the range 10–30 g/100 g dry matter, and showed typical molecular distribution according to size-exclusion chromatography (SEC). The fine structures of amylopectin, as revealed by anion-exchange chromatography, contained features common for starches of C-type X-ray pattern, but some structural differences were also observed.

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