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  2. Modified starch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modified_starch

    Modified starch, also called starch derivatives, is prepared by physically, enzymatically, or chemically treating native starch to change its properties. [1] Modified starches are used in practically all starch applications, such as in food products as a thickening agent, stabilizer or emulsifier; in pharmaceuticals as a disintegrant; or as ...

  3. Phosphated distarch phosphate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphated_distarch_phosphate

    In 2011, the European Food Safety Authority approved a health claim that all types of resistant starch, including modified resistant starch, can reduce the post-prandial glycemic response in foods when the high carbohydrate baked food contains at least 14% of total starch as resistant starch. [4] In 2019, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration ...

  4. Starch production - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starch_production

    Starch production is an isolation of starch from plant sources. It takes place in starch plants. Starch industry is a part of food processing which is using starch as a starting material for production of starch derivatives, hydrolysates, dextrins. At first, the raw material for the preparation of the starch was wheat. Currently main starch ...

  5. List of buckwheat dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_buckwheat_dishes

    Ploye – a pancake made of buckwheat flour, [1] wheat flour, baking powder and water popular in Northeastern Canada and Maine. Crozets de Savoie – small flat square-shaped pasta originally made in the Savoie region in southeast France, the crozets were traditionally made at home by housewives using buckwheat or wheat, or sometimes both.

  6. Hydroxypropyl distarch phosphate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydroxypropyl_distarch...

    Hydroxypropyl distarch phosphate (HDP) is a modified resistant starch. It is currently used as a food additive ( INS number 1442). [ 1 ] It is approved for use in the European Union (listed as E1442), [ 2 ] the United States, Australia, Taiwan, and New Zealand.

  7. Starch gelatinization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starch_gelatinization

    Gel temperature can also be modified by genetic manipulation of starch synthase genes. [4] Gelatinization temperature also depends on the amount of damaged starch granules; these will swell faster. Damaged starch can be produced, for example, during the wheat milling process, or when drying the starch cake in a starch plant. [5]

  8. Acetylated distarch adipate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acetylated_distarch_adipate

    Acetylated distarch adipate (E1422) is a food additive of the thickening agent type, and more specifically a bulking agent. It is also used as a stabilizer. This is an additive belonging to the family of modified starches. This is a starch that is treated with acetic anhydride and adipic acid anhydride to resist high temperatures.

  9. Acetylated starch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acetylated_starch

    Acetylated starch, E1420 in the E number scheme of food additives, is a modified starch. These are not absorbed intact by the gut, but are significantly hydrolysed by intestinal enzymes and then fermented by intestinal microbiota .