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Microstructure of Seeds, Flours, and Starches of Legumes

July 1997 Volume 74 Number 4
Pages 445 — 451
Terri Otto , Byung-Kee Baik , and Zuzanna Czuchajowska 1

Graduate research assistant, research associate and associate professor, respectively, Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-6376. Corresponding author: Fax: 509/335-4815.


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Accepted March 24, 1996.
ABSTRACT

The microstructure of cotyledons and flours of both garbanzo beans and peas were examined by a scanning electron microscope (SEM) at low and high magnification. While the cells in the outer layer of the cotyledon were elongated and tightly packed in both garbanzo beans and peas, they were rounder and more loosely packed in the central part of the cotyledon, with many intercellular spaces. Cotyledon cells of garbanzo beans were smaller than those of the pea cultivars. Flour fractions from the inner layer of the cotyledon of garbanzo beans and pea cultivars had much finer particles; were lower in protein, lipid, ash and fiber; and contained more starch than those from the outer layer of the cotyledon. In prime starches isolated from garbanzo beans and smooth peas, protein, free lipid, and ash were lower than 0.41, 0.11, and 0.17%, respectively, indicating that the starches are highly pure. Garbanzo bean starch had smaller and smoother granules than those of smooth peas. Starch granules of wrinkled pea cv. Scout had a unique shape, with deep fissures and grooves, which could be partly responsible for difficulties encountered during the wet fractionation process.



© 1997 by the American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.