S2-16
Deep-fat
Frying of Cassava: Influence of Raw Material Properties on Chip Quality
Vitrac
O., D. Dufour, G. Trystram, A.L. Raoult-Wack
Anthropology
Dept., University of Colorado, Campus Box 233, Boulder, Colorado
80309 DUFOURD@SPOT.COLORADO.EDU
Thirteen
cultivars of cassava (Manihot esculenta
Crantz) were used to obtain chips by deep frying slices of fresh cassava
flesh in palm oil. The
cultivars were representative of three different levels of four major
characteristics (water, cyanide, starch and amylose content) in
parenchyma. The effects of
raw material composition and crop age (10 and 12 months) on mass
transfer (dehydration and oil uptake), texture and colour were assessed
for 1.5-mm thick chips with a same final water content (0.04
kgkg-1 wet basis, corresponding to water activity of about
0.3). Frying time varied from 70 to 90 s and oil bath temperature
from 150 to 160∞C. All
cultivars gave a high frying yield (> 0.5 kg chips/kg pulp) and a
chip fat content of between 0.23 and 0.37 kgkg-1 wet basis,
with the highest frying yields and lowest fat contents being obtained
from roots with the lowest water content and cyanide content. The
intensity of darkening reactions increased in accordance with the level
of reducing sugars, while the rigidity modulus of the chips was
negatively correlated with the fibre content.
The other characteristics (starch, amylose and total sugar
content) were not or poorly correlated with any of the chip quality
parameters studied. Cyanoglucosides
were only partially eliminated during frying (over 40% retention) and
cultivars with a high cyanide content therefore gave bitter chips.
For a similar composition, drying rates and cooking rates were
much lower when crop age increased.
This could be attributed to a structural effect characterising
crop age.
Journal of the
Science of Food and Agriculture, 81, 2000. 227-236.
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