Structural and functional properties of acetylated distarch adipate with varying degrees of substitution: Impact on freeze-thaw stability of frozen dough.

Food Chem

School of Food Science and Technology, State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, National Engineering Research Center for Functional Food, Jiangnan University, 1800 Lihu Avenue, Wuxi 214122, China. Electronic address:

Published: November 2025


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

In this study, Acetylated distarch adipate (ADA) with varying degrees of substitution was synthesized from cassava starch. Structural and functional analyses revealed that increasing DS decreased the relative crystallinity and gelatinization temperature of ADA, while enhancing paste viscosity, anti-retrogradation ability, and freeze-thaw stability. After freeze-thaw cycles, CS-ADA-5 (DS = 0.054) exhibited the lowest water separation rate (9.67 %). Rheological, LF-NMR, and microstructural analyses demonstrated that the incorporation of ADA improved frozen dough quality. Compared to the control, CS-ADA-5 demonstrated a 42 % increase in storage modulus, a 37 % increase in loss modulus, a 53 % higher proportion of tightly bound water, a 25 % reduction in free water, and a more uniformly dispersed gluten-starch network. However, higher DS (>0.054) decreased water-binding capacity and exacerbated ice crystal damage. These findings indicate ADA effectively stabilizes frozen dough by inhibiting ice recrystallization, preserving gluten structure, and improving moisture distribution, offering valuable insights for industrial applications in frozen food production.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2025.145604DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

frozen dough
12
structural functional
8
acetylated distarch
8
distarch adipate
8
varying degrees
8
degrees substitution
8
freeze-thaw stability
8
functional properties
4
properties acetylated
4
adipate varying
4

Similar Publications

This study compared the effects of phosphorylated modified long-chain inulin (PF) with low (PF1), medium (PF3), and high (PF6) degrees of substitution on the rheological, thermal, gluten network depolymerization characteristics, and microstructure of unfrozen and frozen dough. The results showed that PF increased G', G", Tp, and ΔH of unfrozen and frozen dough. Gluten protein analysis revealed that PF significantly increased the SS and α-helix content in gluten, with 3 %FPF3 showing an 11.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The formation and recrystallization of ice crystals during freezing causes irreversible structural damage to the dough matrix, which is characterized by the cold denaturation of the gluten protein structure and the degradation of the gluten network structure. Polysaccharides are widely used to improve the quality of frozen dough owing to their excellent water-holding and viscosity. Current research has shown that polysaccharides mitigate the physical damage of ice crystals on the gluten protein structure mainly by modifying the water status of frozen dough to inhibit the ice crystallization process.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Enzymatic preparation of medium-chain fatty acid enriched specialty fat for application in hand-grasp pancakes.

Food Chem X

August 2025

College of Food Science and Engineering, Henan University of Technology, 100# Lianhua road, High-Tech District, Zhengzhou 450001, Henan, China.

This study developed medium-chain fatty acid (MCFA)-enriched specialty fats for hand-grasp pancakes through enzymatic interesterification (EIE) using a soybean oil/fully hydrogenated coconut oil/fully hydrogenated palm oil blend (6:1:3 w/w/w) as the substrate. Orthogonal optimization achieved 99.85 % randomization efficiency under mild conditions (70 °C, 12 % lipase load, 4 h).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study modified corn, oat, barley, and buckwheat starches using a Henan-specific sourdough starter, revealing that the initial starch architecture governs differentiated functional transformations. Pore-dominant starches (corn/buckwheat) underwent "inside-out" enzymatic pathways-corn starch exhibited a 38.21% reduced particle size through pore expansion, with long amylopectin chain degradation forming thermally stable gels, establishing it as an ideal base for anti-staling sauces and frozen dough.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study explores the impact of multifrequency ultrasonic treatments on the properties of wheat frozen dough starch at different treatment times (15, 25, and 35 min). Fundamental properties analyzed included particle size, solubility, swelling power, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), morphological traits, digestibility, and rheological characteristics. Results indicate that ultrasonication (US) enhances the amylose content, solubility, and swelling power of the frozen wheat dough starch.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF