Abstract

Changes in pasting and thermal properties of non-waxy rice flour and its isolated starch during storage at 25, 35 and 45°C were compared. Aging had no apparent effect on the pasting behaviour of the isolated starch, but markedly affected that of the flour. Peak viscosity ( V p) of rice flour pastes generally increased with both temperature and time of storage, but reached a plateau within 4 weeks of storage at 45°C. Fresh flour paste exhibited lower V p, a slower rise in apparent viscosity, and much better stability than an isolated starch paste. The addition of isolated oryzenin to isolated rice starch resulted in pasting behaviour which more closely approximated that of an extensively aged flour. DSC scans of fresh flour at ∼13% moisture revealed a weak heat-irreversible endothermic event over the temperature range from 47 to 66°C which was attributed to the denaturation of oryzenin. This transition was shifted to higher temperatures with increasing storage temperature and time. It also became increasingly skewed and broadened until it was no longer detectable after the flour had been stored at 45°C for 8 weeks. Starch gelatinization characteristics of both flour and isolated starch, as determined by DSC, were apparently unaffected by aging. However, rice flour exhibited significantly higher onset temperature of gelatinization, but lower gelatinization enthalpy, than isolated rice starch. Similarly, pulsed NMR studies showed no apparent effect of aging on retrogradation behaviour of rice flour or starch gels. These results suggest that modification of the protein component, rather than starch, was primarily responsible for rheological changes associated with aging of rice flour.

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