Cereals & Grains Association
Log In

Effects of Selected Harvest Moistures and Frozen Storage Times on Selected Yellow Dent Corn: Wet-Milling Yields and Starch Pasting Properties

March 2012 Volume 89 Number 2
Pages 104 — 108
Haibo Huang,1 Li Xu,1 and Steven R. Eckhoff1,2

Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, Urbana, IL, 61801. Corresponding author. Phone: 217-244-4022. Fax: 217-244-0323. E-mail: seckhoff@illinois.edu


Go to Article:
Accepted January 30, 2012.
ABSTRACT

The effects of harvest moistures and frozen storage times on corn wet-milling yields and the pasting properties of the resulting starch were studied. Pioneer hybrid P-0916-XR harvested at three moisture contents (49, 35, and 21% wb) were stored frozen for three days or for five months, followed by wet-milling. The pasting properties of the resulting starch were evaluated with a Rapid Visco Analyzer. The yields of starch and germ increased by 1.2 and 1.9 percentage points, respectively, when harvest moisture decreased from 49 to 21% wb, whereas the yields of steep water solids, total fiber, and gluten decreased by 2.1, 0.7, and 0.6 percentage points, respectively. The frozen corn had lower coarse fiber yields but higher cellular fiber yields. The starch pasting properties showed that peak and breakdown viscosities decreased by 8% (3,824 ± 36 versus 3,520 ± 38 cP) and 13% (2,336 ± 47 versus 2,029 ± 60 cP), respectively, when harvest moisture decreased from 49 to 21% wb, whereas peak time increased by 5% (6.32 ± 0.06 versus 6.62 ± 0.07 min). The setback and final viscosities of starch from long-term frozen storage (five months) were 14% (1,574 ± 65 versus 1,828 ± 79 cP) and 8% (3,063 ± 27 versus 3,317 ± 101 cP) lower, respectively, than that from control (unfrozen) corn.



© 2012 AACC International, Inc.