To investigate the effects of repeated dry heat treatment (RDH) and continuous dry heat treatment (CDH) on the structure and physicochemical and digestive properties of potato starch, potato starch was treated continuously and repeatedly at 130 °C for 3–18 h. The results showed that the crystalline form of starch was consistent with the original type B. Still, its physicochemical properties, such as swelling power, transparency, peak viscosity (PV), final viscosity (FV), breakdown (BD) and thermal properties (To, Tp, Tc, ΔT), tended to decrease. At the same time, solubility and RS increased after dry heat treatment. Moreover, RDH-treated starches were higher than CDH-treated ones in terms of molecular weight, crystallinity, swelling power, transparency and final viscosity for the same treatment time. Still, there was no significant difference between the thermal properties of the two. Meanwhile, the resistant starch (RS) content showed a downward trend after the peak value of 9 h of CDH treatment and five cycles of RDH treatment with increasing treatment time and the number of cycles, indicating a decrease in the overall digestibility of the starch. Overall, RDH had a more significant effect on potato starch’s structure and physicochemical properties than CDH.
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