Abstract

ABSTRACT Yam, cassava, jackfruit seed and mango seed kernel have potential for the extraction and use as starch in the food industry of starch or for the formulation of biodegradable coatings. As a biodegradable coating, starch can be applied in fruits characterized by a fast maturation, such as mango, which requires technologies to increase its shelf life. The aim of this study was to characterize starch from four non-traditional sources and to evaluate their potential as coating for ‘Palmer’ mango fruit. Starches used were extracted from cassava, mango seed kernel, jackfruit seed, and yam, and had their physical, optical, and chemical properties characterized for later use as coatings of ‘Palmer’ mango fruit. Fruits were coated with 3% cassava starch, 3.5% jackfruit seed starch, 3.5% mango seed kernel starch and 3.5% yam starch, and were compared to the control (uncoated). They were then stored at 24.4 ± 0.3 °C and 87 ± 2% RH and evaluated for 12 days. A 5x7 factorial arrangement in a completely randomized experimental design was adopted. Total starch content was higher than 70% in the four sources of starch. Starches from jackfruit and yam had higher amylose content. The four sources of starch had low water solubility and swelling power, with jackfruit seed starch having the highest values. The coating sources were effective in maintaining quality, particularly mango seed kernel starch because it reduced respiratory rate and weight loss in 27.7% and 33.8%, respectively, as well as jackfruit seed starch as it delayed fruit skin yellowing.

Highlights

  • Starch is one of the most abundant polymers in nature and the major reserve source in most plants

  • Amylopectin is less water soluble than amylose, consisting of D-glucose units linked by α-1,4 and α-1,6 bonds, the latter being responsible for branching the molecule, which has a length of 20 to 30 units of glucose (Caballero; Finglas; Toldrá, 2015)

  • Starch sources used in this study were cassava, mango seed kernel, jackfruit seed, and yam

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Starch is one of the most abundant polymers in nature and the major reserve source in most plants. Amylopectin is less water soluble than amylose, consisting of D-glucose units linked by α-1,4 and α-1,6 bonds, the latter being responsible for branching the molecule, which has a length of 20 to 30 units of glucose (Caballero; Finglas; Toldrá, 2015). There are other additional, non-traditional starch sources such as yam, jackfruit seed, and mango seed kernel. They have potential to be used in the food industry as sources of starch for the formulation of films and/or biodegradable coatings (Caballero; Finglas; Toldrá, 2015; Falade; Ayetigbo, 2015; Guimarães et al, 2017; Madruga et al, 2014; Torres-León et al, 2016)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call