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Effect of Specific Mechanical Energy on Properties of Extruded Protein-Starch Mixtures

May 2002 Volume 79 Number 3
Pages 429 — 433
Maoz Gropper , 1 Carmen I. Moraru , 1 and Jozef L. Kokini 1 , 2

Food Science Department, Rutgers—The State University of New Jersey, 65 Dudley Road, New Brunswick, NJ 08901. Corresponding author. E-mail: kokini@aesop.rutgers.edu Phone: 732-932-9611 ext 201.


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Accepted November 1, 2001.
ABSTRACT

The effect of the specific mechanical energy (SME) during extrusion of a protein-starch mixture was studied by analyzing the glass transition temperature (Tg) and starch gelatinization. We found that the SME values of 344 to 2108 kJ/kg did not significantly change the Tg of the product. To explain the insensitivity of Tg to SME in spite of reported fragmentation taking place during extrusion, we studied the effect of the molecular weight (MW) on Tg in a model system consisting of dextrans of varying molecular weights. We found that the effect of the molecular weight on the Tg reached a plateau at 6.7 × 104. Because the reported size of the fragments created during the extrusion process is larger than this, we were able to explain the apparent insensitivity of Tg to SME in the protein-carbohydrate matrix studied. However, we found that starch gelatinization varied with SME, the degree of gelatinization being higher for systems exposed to higher SME.



© 2002 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.