Abstract

In the presented study, starch of two cultivars of field bean was modified via the heat-moisture treatment (HMT) at various moisture contents (15 and 30%) and temperatures (100 and 120 °C) to determine HMT effect on its physicochemical properties and digestibility. Non-modified (NM) starches showed only slight variation in properties, with the tested varieties differing only in slowly digestible starch (SDS) and resistant starch (RS) content. The HMT was shown to decrease the swelling power and amylose leaching and higher phase transition temperatures and wider gelatinization temperature ranges in all modification conditions. These effects were caused by changes in the starch structure, as evidenced by the observed the decrease in relative crystallinity. The changes were the most pronounced in the starches treated at the higher moisture level. The HMT modification modified also starch digestibility. The total content of SDS and RS in non-gelatinized HMT starches modified at 15% moisture content was higher than that determined in the starch modified at 30% moisture content. In most gelatinized HMT starches, the SDS content decreased and that of RS did not change significantly compared to the native starch. Despite modified physicochemical properties, those starches still represent a good source of resistant starch.

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