Non-Conventional Starch Sources: Properties, Functionality, and Applications presents the use of non-conventional, unutilized, and underutilized sources to isolate, characterize and functionalize starches. Specific attention is paid to the sources' application in foods as well as their incorporation into packaging through films and coatings. Broken into seven sections, this book addresses sources from fruit seeds, cereals and millets, pseudo-cereals, seeds, roots and tubers, rhizome and legumes. Food scientists, technologists and students and researchers studying related fields will benefit from this important reference.
- Presents chapters with a set of specific sections, including an introduction, chemical derivatization of natural products, current applications, pharmacological activities of semisynthetic derivatives, and references
- Covers fruit seeds such as avocado, litchi, mango, jackfruit, loquat, longan and tamarind
- Addresses adlay starch, sorghum starch, finger millet starch, pros-millet starch, fox millet starch, and kodo millet starch as well as that from amaranth, quinoa and buckwheat
- Explores starches from annatto, lotus and bamboo seeds as well as starches from roots and tubers, including yams and kudzu
- Considers starch from ginger and turmeric as well as that from legumes, including faba and kidney beans, common beans, chickpeas and peas
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Elsevier Science & Techn.
Dateigröße
ISBN-13
978-0-443-18982-1 (9780443189821)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Section I: Fruits seeds1. Avocado seed starch- Structure, functionality, and applications2. Litchi seed starch-Isolation, modification, and characterization3. Jackfruit kernel starch-composition, structure, properties and modifications4. Longan seed starch- Structure, functionality, and applications
Section II: Cereals and millets5. Sorghum starch- Functionality and potential applications6. Physicochemical, structural, and functional properties of native and modified Proso-millet starch7. Foxmillet starch-structure, functionality, and applications8. Composition, structure and functionality of starch isolated from Kodo millet
Section III: Pseudo-cereals9. Amaranth starch- Physiochemical, functional, and nutritional properties10. Quinoa starch- Functionality and potential applications
Section IV: Seeds11. Lotus seed starch: Modification, structure, digestive properties, and probiotics12. Bamboo seed starch- Structure, functionality, and applications
Section V: Rhizome13. Turmeric starch- Structure, functionality, and applications
Section VI: Legumes14. Faba-bean starch- Structure, functionality, and applications15. Kidney bean starch- composition, structure, properties, and modifications16. Jack Bean Starch-Properties, functionality and modification17. Pea starch- Functionality and potential applications