Issue 11, 2014

Influence of hydration and starch digestion on the transient rheology of an aqueous suspension of comminuted potato snack food

Abstract

Oral processing of most foods is inherently destructive: solids are broken into particles before reassembly into a hydrated bolus while salivary enzymes degrade food components. In order to investigate the underlying physics driving changes during oral processing, we capture the transient rheological behaviour of a simulated potato chip bolus during hydration by a buffer with or without α-amylase. In the absence of amylase and for all oil contents and solids weight fractions tested, we find a collapse of the transient data when graphed according to simple Fickian diffusion. In the presence of amylase, we find effects on the transient and pseudo steady state bolus rheology. Within the first minute of mixing, the amylase degrades only ≈6% of the starch but that leads to an order of magnitude reduction in the bolus elasticity, as compared to the case without amylase. Thus, for an in vitro bolus, only a small amount of starch needs to be digested to have a large impact on the bolus rheology very soon after mixing.

Graphical abstract: Influence of hydration and starch digestion on the transient rheology of an aqueous suspension of comminuted potato snack food

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Jun 2014
Accepted
06 Sep 2014
First published
09 Sep 2014

Food Funct., 2014,5, 2775-2782

Author version available

Influence of hydration and starch digestion on the transient rheology of an aqueous suspension of comminuted potato snack food

M. W. Boehm, F. J. Warren, J. E. Moore, S. K. Baier, M. J. Gidley and J. R. Stokes, Food Funct., 2014, 5, 2775 DOI: 10.1039/C4FO00573B

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