Abstract
The flow properties of the fluid portion of fruit fillings were assessed to investigate the effects of gums. Results indicated that the shear rate–shear stress relations of the fluid portion of commercial fruit fillings and the model fillings made of waxy corn starch, fructose, citrate buffer, and a gum which could be guar gum, locust bean gum, CMC, xanthan gum or κ-carrageenan, fit well into the Herschel–Bulkley equation for pseudoplastic fluids. The fluid portion of the commercial fruit fillings was characterized with a yield stress between 39–51 Pa, a consistency index between 52–104 Pa·s n , and a flow index ( n) around 0.4. In addition, the shear rate–shear stress relations could be fitted into a modified Herschel–Bulkley equation with a flow index fixed at 0.4. Addition of guar gum, locust bean gum and CMC increased while xanthan gum and κ-carrageenan decreased the consistency and flow indices in the modified Herschel–Bulkley equation. The effect of gum addition on the apparent viscosity of model fillings varies with the type of gum, amount of addition, and shear rate.
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