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    Evaluation of some quality parameters of cassava starch and soy protein isolate matrices during deep fat frying in soybean oil

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    Journal Article (524.8Kb)
    Authors
    Omidiran, A.T.
    Sobukola, O.P.
    Sanni, S.A.
    Sanni, L.O.
    Adebowale, A.A.
    Shajobi, A.O.
    Kulakow, Peter
    Date Issued
    2019-02
    Date Online
    2018-12
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    ISI journal
    Accessibility
    Open Access
    Usage rights
    CC-BY-4.0
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    Citation
    Omidiran, A.T., Sobukola, O.P., Sanni, S.A., Sanni, L.O., Adebowale, A.A., Shajobi, A.O. & Kulakow, P. (2019). Evaluation of some quality parameters of cassava starch and soy protein isolate matrices during deep fat frying in soybean oil. Food Science & Nutrition, 7(2), 656-666.
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/113394
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.904
    Abstract/Description
    Snack industry is recently focused on the production of snacks with minimal oil content and enhanced quality attributes which prompted the need to study the changes in snack matrices produced from cassava starch processed from three varieties of cassava roots (TMS‐950289, TME‐419, and TMS‐30572) and soy protein isolate blends fried in soybean oil. Effect of frying temperature (170–180°C), frying time (2–4 min), soy protein isolate inclusion level (5%–15%) on proximate composition, color changes, expansion, texture, and sensory attributes of the snacks was investigated. Optimization of process variables was carried out based on a factorial design (2 level by 3 factor) in the Design Expert version 6.0.8, and models were generated showing the relationship between the independent variables and the responses. The desired goal for each constraint (processing conditions) was kept within 170–180°C for 2–4 min, while all responses, except chewiness, expansion, yellowness, and protein, were set at minimum. Evaluation of sensory attributes of the optimized sample was carried out to determine its level of desirability. The optimized frying conditions for matrices produced from starches of TMS‐950289 are 170°C/4 min/5% SPI with desirability value of 0.507; from TME‐419 are 180°C/2 min/5% SPI with desirability value of 0.475 while for those from TMS‐30572 are 170°C/4 min/15% SPI with desirability value of 0.459. At higher SPI level, the protein content was high at 170°C. At 4 min frying time for all the varieties, the moisture content reduces. The most desired optimized fried snack produced from starch of TMS‐30572 (containing 15% SPI) had higher crispness and lower oil content than other optimized fried snacks.
    CGIAR Author ORCID iDs
    Peter Kulakowhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-7574-2645
    CGIAR Impact Areas
    Nutrition, health and food security
    Other CGIAR Affiliations
    Roots, Tubers and Bananas
    Contributes to SDGs
    SDG 2 - Zero hunger
    AGROVOC Keywords
    cassava starch; cassava; quality; soybeans; proteins; nigeria; soybean oil; snack foods
    Subjects
    AGRONOMY; CASSAVA; CROP SYSTEMS; FOOD SECURITY; GRAIN LEGUMES; PLANT BREEDING; PLANT PRODUCTION; SOYBEAN
    Countries
    Nigeria
    Regions
    Africa; Western Africa
    Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
    Federal University of Agriculture, Nigeria; International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
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    • IITA Journal Articles [4998]

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