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Relationships between composition, microstructure and cooking performances of six potato varieties.

Authors :
Romano, Annalisa
D'Amelia, Vincenzo
Gallo, Veronica
Palomba, Sara
Carputo, Domenico
Masi, Paolo
Source :
Food Research International. Dec2018, Vol. 114, p10-19. 10p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Abstract Potatoes tubers are the raw materials of many processed food, such as cooked potatoes in hot water, baked potatoes and the most popular fried potatoes. The objective of this work was to study the impact of boiling, baking and frying on microstructure and properties of six potato varieties (Agata, Agria, Innovator, Lady Rosetta, Musica and Spunta) with different origin. Scanning Electron Microscopy revealed significant differences between varieties and tuber microstructure changes following all cooking processes. Differential Scanning Calorimeter analysis showed that the transition temperatures (ranging between 60 °C and 85 °C) and enthalpies of gelatinization (2.1 J/g–3.9 J/g) of tubers were also variety dependent. In addition, the elasticity modulus of cooked samples depended on process type and followed the order: baked potatoes > boiled > fried potatoes. In particular, baked Lady Rosetta (224.3 kPa) showed the least decrease in rigidity between thermal processes. Fried Agria and Spunta, (56.3 and 61 kPa, respectively) had the smallest value of Young's modulus. Molecular marker analyses provided a genetic fingerprinting of our varieties, allowing the identification of diagnostic markers. Innovator revealed an important genetic distance from the other varieties. Such distance corresponded to its exclusive phenotypic traits, that are known to affect thermochemical properties. The information obtained in this work may be useful to further study and associate genetic sequences with appreciable food technological traits. Graphical abstract Unlabelled Image Highlights • The chemical and thermal properties of potatoes differed among examined varieties. • Microstructure of tubers were variety and cooking processes dependent. • Molecular fingerprinting of potato varieties detected noteworthy DNA polymorphisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09639969
Volume :
114
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Food Research International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132529881
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2018.07.033