Abstract

ABSTRACTHigh‐amylose corn starch was cooked in an excess‐steam jet cooker in the presence of 5% oleic or palmitic acid, based on amylose. The cooked product was rapidly cooled in an ice bath and then freeze‐dried or drum‐dried. Amylose was removed from solution by forming helical inclusion complexes with the fatty acid, and the inclusion complexes formed submicron spherical particles upon cooling. The dried material was reconstituted to form a paste that exhibited gel‐like properties upon standing, but that flowed readily when shear was applied. The rheological properties of these pastes were measured to determine the effects on the flow properties of 1) the solids concentration in the reconstituted paste, 2) the method of sample drying and reconstitution, and 3) the fatty acid used. The materials were very spreadable, and at the highest concentrations their flow properties were similar to a commercial shortening. The pasting properties of the dried solids were also examined.

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