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1.
Reducing corn steep time by adding lactic acid instead of relying on in situ fermentation was studied. Corn at two initial moisture levels (15 and 20%) was steeped for 18 hr in a countercurrent steep system. The initial SO2 target concentration in steepwater was 2,000 or 3,000 ppm, while the initial lactic acid concentration in steepwater was 0, 0.28, or 0.55%. Adding lactic acid under all steeping conditions decreased steepwater pH, accelerated SO2 absorption, and increased the amount of solids released from corn. Adding lactic acid during steeping also increased the first grind slurry density and made germ skimming easier than when no lactic acid was added. Starch yields for the hybrid used in this study under all steep conditions were comparable to those from 24‐hr steeping, except when steeping corn with an initial moisture content of 15% in ≈2,000 ppm of SO2 alone. For the 20% moisture corn, adding lactic acid to fresh steepwater significantly improved the starch yield at ≈2,000 ppm of SO2 for 18‐hr steeping. At ≈3,000 ppm of SO2, adding lactic acid did not increase the starch yield for the hybrid used. The protein content in starch was significantly lower when lactic acid was added. Pasting properties of starch were not affected by adding lactic acid. The hybrid used in this study had an initial moisture content of 20% and could be wet‐milled without affecting starch yield, starch protein content, and pasting properties.  相似文献   

2.
The relative effectiveness of dehulling, potassium hydroxide dipping (alkali concentrations 0.2, 0.5, and 1.0 %), and ethyl oleate spraying (aqueous emulsion 1%, v/v) to increase the rate of water absorption by dent and flint corn during steeping was compared with untreated corn samples. These pretreatments increased the water absorption rate of both hybrids when compared with the untreated control samples. To evaluate the observed increase, the diffusion coefficients of pretreated and untreated corn samples were estimated. Corn grains steeped in SO2 aqueous solution and variable lactic acid concentrations (0.2, 0.5, and 1.0%, v/v) were performed. Absorption rates for lactic acid concentrations were ≈0.5% higher than those steeped only in SO2 solution. This effect was more marked for dent than for flint corn. Corn samples pretreated with potassium hydroxide had lower starch yields than the control. However, the presence of lactic acid in steepwater increased the starch yield of dent and flint corn, particularly for the samples treated with alkaline solution. This procedure was particularly beneficial for flint corn. An effective release of the starch granules was achieved within 24 hr of steeping.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of lactic acid on starch yields of different corn hybrids was determined by wet-milling 18 commercial corn hybrids at three levels of lactic acid. All 18 hybrid samples tested had higher starch yields when lactic acid was added to the steep solution, although the magnitude of the increased starch yields varied between 2.9 and 12.0%. The optimal lactic acid concentration for maximum starch recovery was found to be between 0.55 and 1.67% lactic acid, by wet-milling nine of the same 18 corn hybrids with seven levels of added lactic acid. Between 0.83 and 1.67% lactic acid, the starch yields of eight of the nine hybrids were constant (within ±0.5%). Results showed that the average starch yield across all hybrids decreased with a lactic acid concentration <0.55% and a lactic acid concentration >1.67%.  相似文献   

4.
A procedure that reduces diffusional limitations by periodically milling the corn to reduce particle size and stirring the ground mash in the presence of sulfur dioxide (SO2) and lactic acid was developed. The process, called intermittent milling and dynamic steeping (IMDS), includes three main stages: initial soaking (a short-time immersion in water) of whole kernels, initial cracking of the partially hydrated kernels, and dynamic steeping with interspersed milling. This study evaluated the three stages of the process separately, evaluating the effect of variables on each stage of the process. Corn fractions yield (germ, fiber, gluten, starch) were used to decide the best conditions for the soaking and steeping stages, and germ damage was used to determine the best kernel cracking method. Starch, gluten, and germ yields were not affected by soak temperatures (52–68°C) or soak time (1–3 hr). A temperature of 60°C was chosen for soaking because it increased the rate of kernel hydration without gelatinizing starch, which happens at higher temperatures. A 2-hr soak time was preferred because there was less fiber in the germ fraction and less germ damage was observed. Although there were no advantage to using SO2 or lactic acid in the soak water, the presence of these compounds during dynamic steeping enhanced starch yield. The starch yield for 3 hr of dynamic steeping was not statistically different from the starch yield for a 7.5-hr dynamic steep. The Bauer mill was preferred over the use of a roller mill or a commercial grade Waring blender for kernel cracking. The IMDS process produced, on an average, 1 percentage point more starch than the conventional 36-hr steeping process. Total steep or kernel preparation time was reduced from 24–40 hr for conventional wet-milling to 5 hr for the IMDS process.  相似文献   

5.
Effect of lactic acid, SO2, temperature, and their interactions were assessed on the dynamic steeping of a Brazilian dent corn (hybrid XL 606) to determine the ideal relationship among these variables to improve the wet‐milling process for starch and corn by‐products production. A 2×2×3 factorial experimental design was used with SO2 levels of 0.05 and 0.1% (w/v), lactic acid levels of 0 and 0.5% (v/v), and temperatures of 52, 60, and 68°C. Starch yield was used as deciding factor to choose the best treatment. Lactic acid added in the steep solution improved the starch yield by an average of 5.6 percentage points. SO2 was more available to break down the structural protein network at 0.1% than at the 0.05% level. Starch‐gluten separation was difficult at 68°C. The lactic acid and SO2 concentrations and steeping temperatures for better starch recovery were 0.5, 0.1, and 52°C, respectively. The Intermittent Milling and Dynamic Steeping (IMDS) process produced, on average, 1.4% more starch than the conventional 36‐ hr steeping process. Protein in starch, oil content in germ, and germ damage were used as quality factors. Total steep time can be reduced from 36 hr for conventional wet‐milling to 8 hr for the IMDS process.  相似文献   

6.
A batch-wise small-scale wet-processing laboratory for whole wheat kernel has been designed and constructed to produce wheat starch and gluten from wheat grains. Hard red winter wheat kernels were steeped in three steeping media: SO2 solution, lactic acid, and hydrochloric acid. Acid concentrations of 0.1, 0.3, and 0.5%, were used for SO2 solutions and hydrochloric acid, and 0.1, 0.6, and 3.0% for lactic acid. After 16, 20, and 24 hr of steeping, the wheat was wet-milled. Yields and protein contents of wet-milling fractions were compared. Both high concentration of steeping media and long steeping time increased the starch yield and decreased the protein contents of the starch. However, the steeping time and acid concentration could be reduced from 24 to 20 hr and from 0.5 to 0.3%, respectively, without any statistically significant difference in starch yields or protein contents of the starch. Consistency and color of the starch were affected by both steeping time and acid concentrations of steeping media.  相似文献   

7.
Pasting and thermal properties of starch from corn steeped in the presence of lactic acid and at different steeping times (8, 16, 24, 32, and 40 hr) were investigated. Corn kernels were steeped at 52°C with 0.2% (w/v) SO2 and with and without 0.5% (v/v) lactic acid. The isolated starch obtained by corn wet‐milling was characterized by determining starch recoveries, retrogradation, and melting transition properties of the lipid‐amylose complex by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and pasting properties by the Rapid Visco Analyser (RVA). Damaged granules and the starch granule size were determined by using microscopic techniques. Starches from corn steeped in the presence of lactic acid (LAS) were compared with control starch (CS) steeped without lactic acid. Greater starch recoveries were obtained for LAS samples than for CS samples, and practically no damaged starch was present in the former preparations. The presence of lactic acid affected the RVA profiles and steeping time affected the viscosities of the starch suspensions. In general, the RVA parameters of LAS suspensions were lower than those of CS suspensions. No great modification of the thermal properties was observed; only a slight decrease in amylopectin retrogradation and in the melting enthalpy of the amylose‐lipid complex was observed. Hydrolysis of the starch during steeping seems the most probable explanation to the starch modifications produced by lactic acid addition.  相似文献   

8.
Two corn hybrids (3394 and 33R87) were steeped with three sulfite salts and five acids to test the effect of sulfur dioxide (SO2) source and acid sources on wet‐milling yields and starch properties. Milling yields from each treatment were compared with a control sample that was steeped with 2,000 ppm of SO2 (using sodium metabisulfite) and 0.55% lactic acid. Sulfur dioxide sources were potassium sulfite, sodium sulfite, and ammonium sulfite; acids were acetic, hydrochloric, oxalic, phosphoric, and sulfuric. Starch yields were affected by the SO2 source and steep acids but the effects were hybrid‐dependent. Different steep acids gave different starch yields when wet milled at the same pH. Among the acids tested, weak acids (lactic and acetic) tended to give higher starch yields compared with strong acids (hydrochloric, sulfuric, phosphoric, and oxalic). Some differences were observed with different sulfite salts and acids on starch pasting properties; however, there were no clear trends.  相似文献   

9.
To better understand the role of lactic acid (LA) in corn wet‐milling, steeping studies were performed on different yellow dent corn hybrids using four different solutions containing LA, sulfur dioxide (SO2), a combination of LA and SO2, or no added chemicals. Although there was variation in protein solubilization among the hybrids, protein release was consistently higher when LA was included in the steepwater than when it was excluded (both with and without SO2). Several groups have reported that starch recoveries are improved when steepwater contains LA. To explore the relationship between protein solubilization and starch yield as effected by LA, several yellow dent hybrids were steeped in 0.20% SO2 and 0.50% LA‐0.20% SO2 solutions and milled to recover starch by a 100‐g laboratory corn wet‐milling procedure. In all instances, both starch yields and protein solubilization were enhanced in solutions containing LA. These results support the hypothesis that direct dissolution of the endosperm protein matrix by LA contributes to the improved starch recoveries.  相似文献   

10.
The conventional corn wet‐milling process requires a long steeping time and has environmental and health concerns from the use of SO2. A recently proposed two‐stage enzymatic milling procedure with the first stage of water soaking and coarse grinding of corn and the second stage of incubating with enzymes has been shown to reduce the soaking time and possibly eliminate the need for SO2 addition. This current work explored the applications of protease and high‐intensity ultrasound in the second stage of the two‐stage enzymatic milling for corn starch isolation to further shorten the process time without use SO2. of The starch yield from sonication alone was 55.2–67.8% (starch db) as compared with 53.4% of the water‐only control with stirring for 1 hr and 71.1% of the conventional control with SO2 and lactic acid steeping for 48 hr. Protease digestion alone for 2 hr was not effective (45.8–63.9% yield) in isolating corn starch, but the starch recovery was increased to 61.2–76.1% when protease was combined with sonication. The preferred combination was neutral protease digestion for 2 hr followed by sonication at 75% amplitude for 30 min. The results demonstrated that combinations of high‐intensity ultrasound and neutral protease could replace SO2 and shorten the steeping time in the enzymatic wet‐milling process for corn starch isolation.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of a commercial cell‐wall‐degrading enzyme (CWDE) complex on the steeping time and starch yields of white regular sorghum (RSOR) compared with yellow maize (YMZ) was determined. An in vitro wet‐milling method standardized to test dosages of 0–120 fungal β‐glucanase units (FBG)/100 mL indicated that starch yields were significantly higher for YMZ than RSOR and increased proportionally as enzyme dosage increased. A factorial experiment with a level of confidence of P < 0.05 was performed to study the effect of CWDE addition to coarsely ground grains for 4 hr after 20 or 44 hr of SO2 steeping of whole grains. At both regular steep times, YMZ yielded significantly higher amounts of starch than RSOR. When steep times were compared, grains soaked for 48 hr produced 1.7% higher starch yields than counterparts treated for 24 hr. CWDE significantly increased starch yields and recoveries. Enzyme‐treated grains yielded 2.5% more starch than counterparts steeped regularly. For both grains, the best wet‐milling conditions to obtain the highest amount of starch were 48 hr of steeping and CWDE addition. Under these conditions, YMZ and RSOR yielded 66.9 and 66.6% starch, respectively. Starches obtained after the enzyme treatment at both steep times contained higher amounts of residual protein and ash compared with the untreated counterparts. Rapid viscoamylograph properties of YMZ and RSOR starches were not affected by the use of the CWDE nor the steep time. In comparison with RSOR starch, the YMZ starch initiated gelatinization at lower temperature, had less shear thinning and higher viscosity or setback at the end of cooling.  相似文献   

12.
Pioneer 8500, a red hard sorghum hybrid, was steeped batchwise using three steeping solutions at 50°C: SO2 solution; SO2 solution containing 1.25% (w/w) of a commercial multiple‐enzyme preparation (Novo SP249); and SO2 solution with the addition of 0.5% (w/w) lactic acid. Novo SP249 contained pectolytic, cellulolytic, hemicellulolytic, and proteolytic activities and small amounts of saccharolytic activities. Three SO2 concentrations (0.1, 0.2, and 0.3% w/v) prepared by dissolving sodium bisulfite in distilled water and three steeping times (24, 36, and 48 hr) were used. Incorporation of multiple enzymes into the SO2 resulted in an increase in starch yield with reduced protein content compared with the SO2 solution alone. The best wet‐milling performance for sorghum resulted from the SO2 solution containing 0.5% lactic acid; it produced the whitest starch with the highest yield and the lowest protein content. Both higher SO2 concentration of the steeping solution and longer steeping time led to higher starch yield, lower protein content in starch, and whiter starch. However, no significant differences in starch yield, protein content in starch, and starch color occurred between SO2 concentrations of 0.2 and 0.3% for all three steeping solutions. The optimum steeping process for wet milling of sorghum was using a 0.2% SO2 solution with 0.5% lactic acid for 36 hr at 50°C. Under these conditions, the starch yield, protein content in starch, and L value of starch color were 60.2% (db), 0.49% (db), and 92.7, respectively, which were not significantly different from the best values from the 48‐hr steeping using the solution with 0.3% SO2 and 0.5% lactic acid.  相似文献   

13.
The present research evaluated the feasibility of using ozone (O3) to replace sulfur dioxide (SO2) in corn steeping. Traditionally, steep water contains 0.1–0.2% sulfur dioxide to promote starch‐protein separation and high starch yields, and to control microbial growth. However, residual SO2 in starch products affects product quality and jeopardizes the “organic products” claims. Also, SO2 discharged to the environment pollutes water and air. Ozone is a strong oxidant and disinfectant with a capability to control the growth of putrefactive microorganisms in steeping systems, and to break down the endosperm protein matrix and, hence, improve starch release. This study demonstrates that an ozone‐aided steeping (OAS) process had starch yields as high as conventional SO2 steeping. OAS processes can be conducted at a lower temperature (20°C vs. 50°C) and for shorter times (36 hr vs. 48 hr) than the conventional SO2 processes, suggesting significant energy savings and increased productivity. We have found that the timing of ozone application is of great importance to the performance of the OAS process.  相似文献   

14.
One waxy and three regular yellow dent corn hybrids were wet milled by using two scales of laboratory procedures (modified 100-g and 1-kg) and a pilot-plant procedure (10-kg). The modified 100-g and 1-kg laboratory procedures gave similar yields of wet-milling fractions. Starch yields and recoveries were significantly lower for the pilot-plant procedure, whereas gluten and fiber yields were greater because of their high contents of unrecovered starch. Protein contents of the starches obtained by all three procedures were within commercially acceptable limits (<0.50% db for normal dent corn and <0.30% for waxy corn). Rankings for starch yields and starch recoveries for the four hybrids, having very different physical and compositional properties, were the same for all three procedures. The harder the grain, the lower the yield and recovery of starch. Least significant differences (P < 0.05) for starch yield were 0.8% for the modified 100-g procedure, 1.2% for the 1-kg procedure, and 2.0% for the pilot-plant procedure.  相似文献   

15.
Enzymatic milling (E‐Milling) is a process that could potentially replace the sulfur dioxide procedure currently used in all commercial wet‐milling facilities. E‐Milling incorporates the use of a short water soaking step (≤6 hr), a coarse grind, and the use of a protease to release the starch granules from the corn endosperm. E‐Milling does not require sulfur dioxide to obtain starch yields equivalent to conventional wet milling; however, the important antimicrobial effects of sulfur dioxide are not duplicated by the enzymatic process. The use of low levels of sulfur dioxide (sufficient for antimicrobial activity) is being proposed as an easily implemented means of microbial control during E‐Milling. To assess the effectiveness of E‐Milling under these conditions, fraction yields for milling experiments adding sulfur dioxide with and without added enzyme were compared with fraction yields from conventional 24‐hr steeping with 2,000 ppm SO2 and 0.55% lactic acid. Because adding enzyme and SO2 can both improve product yields and compositions independently, it was necessary to use a reduced level of enzyme (much less than necessary to generate “product quality” material) to observe differences in terms of product yields. The results show significant differences in starch, fiber, total gluten, and insoluble gluten recoveries between samples milled with SO2 and enzyme compared with those at the same SO2 level without enzyme addition. No significant differences were observed for soakwater or germ yields regardless of the SO2 level used. The yield benefits from adding both enzyme and SO2 are clearly shown over the addition of each individually, for all coproduct yields with the exception of the yields for germ.  相似文献   

16.
Physicochemical properties of maize starch obtained under different steeping conditions by intermittent milling and dynamic steeping process (IMDS) were studied. Brazilian dent maize (hybrid XL 606) was milled using a 2×2×3 factorial experimental design with two lactic acid levels (0.0 and 0.55%, v/v), two SO2 levels (0.05 and 0.1%, w/v), and three temperatures (52, 60, and 68°C). Properties of starch obtained by conventional wet‐milling process (36 hr at 52°C, 0.55% lactic acid, and 0.2% SO2) were used for comparison. Starch protein content and solubility increased with presence of lactic acid, while swelling power decreased. Higher SO2 concentration (0.1%) had the same effect as lactic acid on some properties. Steeping temperatures of 60 and 68°C increased solubility and most of the thermal properties but reduced swelling power, suggesting stronger starch annealing during IMDS at these temperatures. Some thermal changes on starch granules were visualized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) at 60 and 68°C. Amylose content as well as pasting properties were affected by steeping factors and interactions. Starches from IMDS and conventional wet‐milling processes were similar in most properties, indicating that IMDS provides starch with quality similar to that from conventional milling.  相似文献   

17.
A corn wet-milling process in which alkali was used was studied as an alternative to the conventional corn wet-milling procedure. In the alkali wet-milling process, corn was soaked in 2% NaOH at 85°C for 5 min and then debranned mechanically to obtain pericarp as a coproduct. Debranned corn was cracked in a roller mill, and the cracked corn was steeped with agitation for 1 hr in 0.5% NaOH at 45°C. The cracked and steeped corn was then processed to separate germ, fiber, and gluten by steps similar to those in conventional wet-milling. Alkali wet-milling yielded soakwater solids, pericarp, germ, starch, gluten, and fine fiber. The protein content of the starch and the starch content of the fiber from the alkali process were lower than those from the conventional process.  相似文献   

18.
A new process was developed to recover corn fiber from the mash before fermentation in dry-grind ethanol production. In this process, corn is soaked in water (no chemicals) for a short period of time and then degermed using conventional degermination mills. In the remaining slurry, corn coarse fiber is floated by increasing the density of the slurry and then separated using density differences. The fiber recovered is called quick fiber to distinguish it from the conventional wet-milled fiber. This study evaluated the percent of quick fiber recovery for a normal yellow dent and high oil corn hybrid. The quick fiber was analyzed for levels of corn fiber oil, levels of ferulate phytosterol esters (FPE) and other valuable phytosterol components in the oil and compared with conventional wet-milled corn coarse and fine fiber samples. Fiber samples were also analyzed and compared for yields of potentially valuable corn fiber gum (CFG, hemicellulose B). Comparisons were made between the quick fiber samples obtained with and without chemicals in the soakwater. An average quick fiber yield of 6–7% was recovered from the two hybrids and represented 46–60% of the total fiber (fine and coarse) that could be recovered by wet-milling these hybrids. Adding steep chemicals (SO2 and lactic acid) to the soakwater increased the quick fiber yields, percent of FPE recoveries, and total percent of phytosterol components to levels either comparable to (for the dent corn hybrid) or higher than (for the high oil corn hybrid) those recovered from the total conventional wet-milled fiber samples. CFG yields in the quick fiber samples were comparable to those from the wet-milled fiber samples. CFG yields in the quick fiber samples were not significantly affected by the addition of chemicals (SO2 and lactic acid) to the soakwater.  相似文献   

19.
The addition of six acids (organic and inorganic) and four sulfite compounds (including gaseous SO2) during the conventional corn wet‐milling steeping process of two yellow dent corn hybrids were evaluated for the effect on corn fiber yield, corn fiber oil yield, and the composition of three phytosterol compounds (ferulate phytosterol esters [FPE], free phytosterols [St], and phytosterol fatty acyl esters [St:E]) in the corn fiber oil. No significant effect of different sulfite compounds and acids were observed on corn fiber yields. However, a significant effect was observed on corn fiber oil yield and the composition of corn fiber oil for phytosterol compounds. Three of the sulfite compounds (including gaseous SO2) caused very little effect on the levels of phytosterol compounds compared with the control sample (corn steeped with sodium metabisulfite and lactic acid). However, for one hybrid, ammonium sulfite gave a significantly higher yield of FPE and St:E and had no effect on the yield of St. For the other hybrid, it gave a significantly higher yield of FPE and had no effect on the yield of St and St:E compared with the control sample. This indicates that the effect of these sulfite compounds on yields of these phytosterol compounds in corn fiber oil is probably hybrid‐dependent. No significant effect of acids was observed on corn fiber yields, but significant effects were observed on corn fiber oil yields and yields of phytosterol compounds in the corn fiber oil. The effect also seems to be hybrid‐dependent because different acids affected the two hybrids differently. Overall, it seems that weak acids have a positive effect on increasing the individual phytosterol compounds in the corn fiber. When comparing the effect of experimental acids and sulfites on the two hybrids, acids have a more positive effect than sulfites in increasing the yield of phytosterol compounds in corn fiber oil.  相似文献   

20.
An alkali corn wet-milling process was developed to evaluate the process as a method to produce high purity corn starch and coproducts with added value. Using a single hybrid (R1064 × LH59), the effects of alkali concentration (0.18–0.82% NaOH), time (29–61 min), and temperature (36–75°C) were investigated. Starch yield was not affected by steep time or temperature. Starch yield was optimal at 65.2% using 0.5% alkali. Increasing the concentration of alkali to 0.82% or decreasing it to 0.18% caused a decrease in starch yield of 8–10 percentage points. Other wet-milling products (fiber, germ, and gluten) also were affected. Steep conditions of 0.5% NaOH, 60 min, and 45°C gave optimal starch yield. Comparisons between alkali and sulfur dioxide wet-milling processes, using 1-kg sample size, were performed on 10 commercial yellow dent corn hybrids. The alkali process averaged 1.7 percentage points more starch than the sulfur dioxide process. Each hybrid had a higher starch yield when wet-milled with the alkali method. Alkali wet-milling produced pure corn starch with <0.30% protein (db).  相似文献   

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