Effect of starch granule size on the properties of dough and the oil absorption of fried potato crisps

Int J Biol Macromol. 2024 Apr 24;268(Pt 2):131844. doi: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.131844. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Starch is a key element in fried potato crisps, however, the effect of starch granule size on oil absorption of the product have yet to be fully investigated. The study explored the impact of starch granule size on both the dough characteristics and oil absorption in potato crisps. The dough composed of small-sized potato granules showed more compact and uniform network system. Additionally, X-ray Microscope analysis showed that potato crisps prepared with small-sized potato granules had limited matrix expansion and fewer pores, cracks, and voids. The small-sized potato and small-sized wheat starches granule addition crisps displayed a significantly greater average cell thickness (52.05 and 53.44 μm) than other samples, while exhibiting notably lower average porosity (61.37 % and 60.28 %) compared to other samples. Results revealed that potato crisps with medium and small potato granules had 12.91 % and 21.92 % lower oil content than those containing large potato starch. Potato crisps with B-type wheat starch showed 16.36 % less oil absorption than those with A-type wheat starch. Small-sized starches significantly influence the dough structure and contribute to the reduction of oil absorption in fried products. The generated insights may provide monitoring indexes for cultivating potato varieties with low oil absorption.

Keywords: Oil uptake; Starch particle size; Starchy gel network structure.