Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10128060 | Carbohydrate Polymers | 2018 | 38 Pages |
Abstract
Surface hydrophobicity and emulsifying capacity correlated with starch type and modification level. Quinoa stabilized emulsions had the smallest droplet size (e.g. 59.2âμm at 3.0% OSA) and superior stability, both before and after centrifugation, especially at the lowest modification levels. Rice and amaranth had larger droplets (99.8 and 84.1âμm at 3.0% OSA respectively). Amaranth, despite its small size showed poorer performance than quinoa, especially at lower modification levels. The higher emulsifying efficiency of quinoa starch granules attributed to the higher protein content.
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Authors
A. Marefati, M. Matos, B. Wiege, N.U. Haase, M. Rayner,