Production of High Fructose Syrup from Cassava and Sweet Potato Flours and their Blends with Cereal Flours

Abstract

Despite being a rich source of starch, root crops such as cassava and sweet potato have not been widely exploited for the production of high fructose syrup (HFS), which is a highly valued sweetener for the food and beverage industries. The major factors contributing to the cost of production of HFS are the cost and labor-intensive steps in the production of starch, different processing temperatures and pH for the enzyme reactions, poor extractability of starch, etc. With the objective of overcoming the cost associated with the preparation of starch, the feasibility of using native cassava/sweet potato flours and their blends with rice flour and wheat flour, as the raw material for HFS production was investigated. The saccharified slurry from cassavarice flour blends contained 7072 g reducing sugars/100 g, which was higher than that released from native cassava flour (69%). Blends of sweet potato with rice or wheat yielded saccharified mash with lower content of reducing sugars (6066%). Although the percentage conversion to fructose after isomerization was similar for cassava/sweet potato or their blends with cereal flours (4243%), fructose yield was higher in native cassava flour and cassavarice blends (2829 g/100 g) than the other flour blends. Key Words: high fructose syrup, cassava, sweet potato, root cropcereal blend

Similar works

Full text

thumbnail-image

CiteSeerX

redirect
Last time updated on 01/11/2017

This paper was published in CiteSeerX.

Having an issue?

Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.