1 / 29

Carbohydrates

Carbohydrates. What are carbohydrates?. Carbohydrates include sugars, starches, cellulose and glycogen. Carbohydrates are needed for storage and liberation of energy. All carbohydrates contain the following elements: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen

ortize
Download Presentation

Carbohydrates

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Carbohydrates

  2. What are carbohydrates? • Carbohydrates include sugars, starches, cellulose and glycogen. • Carbohydrates are needed for storage and liberation of energy. • All carbohydrates contain the following elements: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen • Carbohydrates may be used a sweeteners, thickeners, stabilizers, gelling agents, and fat replacers

  3. Carbohydrates can be divided into three groups • Monosaccharide-”single sugars” eg glucose. • Disaccharides –”double sugars” eg sucrose. • Polysaccharides-”multiple sugars” eg starch • Monosaccharide and disaccharides are sugars that are sweet and soluble. • Polysaccharides are polymers that are not sweet or soluble.

  4. Carbohydrates Glucose Lactose Less water soluble, Less sweet • Water soluble • Sweet (Image: Wikipedia)

  5. Glucose Reactive aldehyde group. A reducing group Linear form Ring forms (Image: Wikipedia)

  6. Maltose Reactive aldehyde group Monosaccharides Disaccharide Glycosidic bond

  7. Sucrose Fructose Glucose No free reactive aldehydes. A non-reducing sugar

  8. Polysaccharides • Polysaccharides are formed from thousands of glucose molecules and are classified as polymers. • There are three polysaccharides that need to be studied: • Starch • Glycogen • Cellulose

  9. Polysaccharides • Monosaccharides linked by glycosidic bonds • Simple chemistry, variable structure (Image: Wikipedia)

  10. Polysaccharide sources • Higher plant sources: Starch, cellulose, pectin • Physically modified: starch, cellulose • Chemically modified: starch, cellulose • Seaweeds: alginate, carageenan • Seeds: guar, locust bean • Tree extrudates: Gum arabic • Microbial fermentations: xanthan gum

  11. Starch granule • Amylopectin • A large molecule • Crystalline structure • Held together by hydrogen bonds • Amylose • A small molecule • Amorphous

  12. Types of Starch Granules FYI: One pound of cornstarch has approx. 800 billion starch granules Rice – small granule Cornstarch Potato Larger starch granules gelatinize first

  13. Gelatinization • Starch granules in water • Heat – overcome the hydrogen bonds • Swelling of starch granules • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L6vYxYE1jOg

  14. Thickening Sol Suspension

  15. Thickening ability • Thickening ability of various starches • What starch has the greatest thickening ability? • Which on has the least? • At what temperature does thickening occur?

  16. Q: What causes lumping? • Dry starch • Exterior granules gelatinized first and clings together • Interior granules remains dry

  17. Ways to avoid lumping • Separation of starch granules • Agitation - stirring • Mix with a fat - roux • Mix with a sugar

  18. Gelation • Gelatinized starch mixture as cools can form a colloidal gel • Hydrogen bonding between amylose molecules

  19. Gelled Dispersions Suspension Sol Gelled solid

  20. Gel structure

  21. Gels • May be clear and form at low concentrations • Often stretch a long way before breaking • Examples: gelatin, starch, carrageenan, pectin Image flickr user Furryscaly

  22. Retrogradation and Syneresis • Retrogradation • The crystallization and matrix forming of starch molecules • Amylose retrogrades quickly • Starches with low levels of amylose do not form gels well • As gel ages there is a continued drawing together of the gel and water is extruded. • Syneresis • Separation of liquid from the gel

  23. To Gel, or Not to Gel • Starches High in Amylose content are able to gel • Starches without amylose thicken, and do not gel

  24. Waxy starch • Contains only amylopectin • Useful for making pies in which a thickened but ungelled consistency is desirable • Waxy starches are derived from some natural strains of barley, corn, rice and sorghum • Root starches are naturally low in amylose (cassava, arrowroot)

  25. Modified Starches • Pregelatinized starch is gelatinized then dried (instant pudding) • CWS may be gelling or non-gelling (low-fat items for mouthfeel) • Cross-linked starches withstand low pH, high shear, or high temperatures (bbq sauce, pizza sauce) • Stabilized starches are used in frozen foods to prevent gelling and syneresis • Acid-modified starch forms a strong gel upon cooling and less viscous when hot.

  26. Pectin • Pectinic acids are dispersible in water and can form gels • It is not easy to form pectin gels: it requires a delicate balance of pectin, water, sugar, and acid • Sugar competes for water, thus making less water available for the pectin molecules • Acid makes the pectin molecules less likely to repel each other

  27. Gums (hydrocolloids) • Complex hydrophilic carbohydrates containing thousands of monosaccharide units • Do not form gels, but trap large amounts of water • Thickening agent (replacing starch) • Stabilizer of emulsions and maintain texture • Mouthfeel of low-fat foods

  28. Gums (hydrocolloids) • Gums can be used synergistically to form gels • Guar and carrageenan • Locust bean and xanthan • Seaweed polysaccharides • Can form gels under certain conditions (iota carrageenan with calcium) • Can also be used with other gums • Agar forms a heat-reversible gel • Alginates are used to produce specialized food products (synthetic fruits)

More Related