2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.indcrop.2004.05.002
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Functional properties of native, physically and chemically modified breadfruit (Artocarpus artilis) starch

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Cited by 172 publications
(139 citation statements)
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“…Water Absorption Capacity (WAC): Water Absorption Capacity (WAC) was determined using the method of Adebowale et al, 2005. 10 ml of distilled water was added to 1 g of the sample in a beaker.…”
Section: Functional Properties Determinationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Water Absorption Capacity (WAC): Water Absorption Capacity (WAC) was determined using the method of Adebowale et al, 2005. 10 ml of distilled water was added to 1 g of the sample in a beaker.…”
Section: Functional Properties Determinationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Determination of Least gelation concentration: Gelation property was determined using the method described by Adebowale et al (2005). Appropriate sample suspensions of 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8, 1.0, 1.2, 1.4, and 1.6 g were weighed into 10 mL distilled water each to make 20% (w/v) suspension.…”
Section: Wac (%) =mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The gelatinization temperature of the starch was 73.3°C, and it was highly stable during heating and cooling cycles. Modification of the starch using oxidation, acetylation, annealing, or heat-moisture treatments can be used to alter some of these functional properties (Adebowale et al 2005). In general, these modifications resulted in reduced gelling activity, solubility, pasting temperature, peak viscosity, hot paste viscosity and cold paste viscosity.…”
Section: Nutritional Compositionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The dispersions were heated in a water bath (BUCHI Water bath B-480, Switzerland) at 80 0 C for 1 h, followed by rapid cooling under running cold water. The test tubes were set at 4 0 C for 2 h. The least gelation concentration was then determined as the concentration at which the sample from the inverted tube did not fall or slip [19].…”
Section: Gelation Propertymentioning
confidence: 99%