The current work reports on isolation and physico-chemical characterization of floridean starch from three species of agarophytic macro red algae. As determined by 1 H-NMR spectroscopy, the average chain length and degree of branching frequency of this starch were 18 and 4.8, respectively. According to its amylopectin chain length distribution obtained by Dionex analysis, the crystalline polymorph of floridean starch from the red alga Gracilariopsis lemaneiformis was deduced to be C-type and this was further supported from its X-ray crystallographic pattern. Enzymatic analysis of its glucose 6-phosphate content showed that floridean starch had a low level of covalently linked phosphate (1 nmol per milligram starch) and this was further confirmed by 31 P-NMR. The absorbance peak of floridean starch with iodine occurred at 527-530 nm and the blue value was low (0.1), indicating the absence of amylose, which was confirmed by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Floridean starch exhibited low gelatinization temperature, low viscosity, high clarity and little or no retrogradation upon repetitive freeze-thaw cycles, as studied by DSC and rapid viscosity analysis (RVA). These results are discussed in light of the functional properties and the structure of floridean starch.
Gels were produced using kappa-, iota-, or hybrid-carrageenan at a low (0.2-0.25%) and a high (0.7-1.0%) dosage in skim milk. The microstructure of carrageenan and protein was observed by confocal laser scanning microscopy using direct immunostaining. Additionally, rheology was used to characterize the gels. The low kappa- and iota-carrageenan dosages resulted in gels with a fine stranded carrageenan-protein microstructure and emulsion-like inclusions, while the high dosages resulted in strongly flocculated microstructures. Hybrid-carrageenan exhibited flocculation at both dosages. When using iota- and hybrid-carrageenan at a high dosage and kappa-carrageenan at both dosages, the gel characteristics were dominated by carrageenan-carrageenan interactions. On the other hand, the gel with a low dosage of iota-carrageenan in milk was barely fusible, indicating the presence of a true coupled network. We suggest that kappa-, iota-, and hybrid-carrageenan all interact with casein micelles but that the impact of this interaction on the total gel properties varied.
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