Effect of storage time on in vitro digestion rate and resistant starch content of tortillas elaborated from commercial corn masas

Tortilla samples were elaborated by four small commercial factories in Mexico, employing masas prepared with the traditional nixtamalization process. Samples were stored at 4 ºC for up to 72 hours and their chemical composition and in vitro starch digestibility features were evaluated. Chemical composition did not change with the storage time, but soluble carbohydrates decreased slightly during storage. A significant decrease in available starch content upon storage was observed, concomitant with increased resistant starch (RS) levels. These changes are possibly due to retrogradation. Retrograded resistant starch (RRS) values increased with storage time; in some samples, RRS represented more than 75% of total RS whereas in others it only accounted for 25%. The digestion rate (DR) in the freshly prepared tortillas was similar for the various samples, but after 72 h storage some differences among tortillas were found. Also, when a single tortilla sample was compared throughout the different storage times, lower DRs were determined in samples subjected to prolonged storage, which is related to the concomitant increase in RRS. The differences found among the various tortilla samples may be due to minor variations in the commercial processing conditions and to the use of different corn varieties.

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Main Authors: Agama-Acevedo,Edith, Rendón-Villalobos,Rodolfo, Tovar,Juscelino, Trejo-Estrada,Sergio Rubén, Bello-Pérez,Luis Arturo
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedad Latinoamericana de Nutrición 2005
Online Access:http://ve.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0004-06222005000100012
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spelling oai:scielo:S0004-062220050001000122005-10-19Effect of storage time on in vitro digestion rate and resistant starch content of tortillas elaborated from commercial corn masasAgama-Acevedo,EdithRendón-Villalobos,RodolfoTovar,JuscelinoTrejo-Estrada,Sergio RubénBello-Pérez,Luis Arturo Corn texture tortillas resistant starch starch digestibility Tortilla samples were elaborated by four small commercial factories in Mexico, employing masas prepared with the traditional nixtamalization process. Samples were stored at 4 ºC for up to 72 hours and their chemical composition and in vitro starch digestibility features were evaluated. Chemical composition did not change with the storage time, but soluble carbohydrates decreased slightly during storage. A significant decrease in available starch content upon storage was observed, concomitant with increased resistant starch (RS) levels. These changes are possibly due to retrogradation. Retrograded resistant starch (RRS) values increased with storage time; in some samples, RRS represented more than 75% of total RS whereas in others it only accounted for 25%. The digestion rate (DR) in the freshly prepared tortillas was similar for the various samples, but after 72 h storage some differences among tortillas were found. Also, when a single tortilla sample was compared throughout the different storage times, lower DRs were determined in samples subjected to prolonged storage, which is related to the concomitant increase in RRS. The differences found among the various tortilla samples may be due to minor variations in the commercial processing conditions and to the use of different corn varieties.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedad Latinoamericana de NutriciónArchivos Latinoamericanos de Nutrición v.55 n.1 20052005-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://ve.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0004-06222005000100012en
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Venezuela
countrycode VE
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-ve
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Agama-Acevedo,Edith
Rendón-Villalobos,Rodolfo
Tovar,Juscelino
Trejo-Estrada,Sergio Rubén
Bello-Pérez,Luis Arturo
spellingShingle Agama-Acevedo,Edith
Rendón-Villalobos,Rodolfo
Tovar,Juscelino
Trejo-Estrada,Sergio Rubén
Bello-Pérez,Luis Arturo
Effect of storage time on in vitro digestion rate and resistant starch content of tortillas elaborated from commercial corn masas
author_facet Agama-Acevedo,Edith
Rendón-Villalobos,Rodolfo
Tovar,Juscelino
Trejo-Estrada,Sergio Rubén
Bello-Pérez,Luis Arturo
author_sort Agama-Acevedo,Edith
title Effect of storage time on in vitro digestion rate and resistant starch content of tortillas elaborated from commercial corn masas
title_short Effect of storage time on in vitro digestion rate and resistant starch content of tortillas elaborated from commercial corn masas
title_full Effect of storage time on in vitro digestion rate and resistant starch content of tortillas elaborated from commercial corn masas
title_fullStr Effect of storage time on in vitro digestion rate and resistant starch content of tortillas elaborated from commercial corn masas
title_full_unstemmed Effect of storage time on in vitro digestion rate and resistant starch content of tortillas elaborated from commercial corn masas
title_sort effect of storage time on in vitro digestion rate and resistant starch content of tortillas elaborated from commercial corn masas
description Tortilla samples were elaborated by four small commercial factories in Mexico, employing masas prepared with the traditional nixtamalization process. Samples were stored at 4 ºC for up to 72 hours and their chemical composition and in vitro starch digestibility features were evaluated. Chemical composition did not change with the storage time, but soluble carbohydrates decreased slightly during storage. A significant decrease in available starch content upon storage was observed, concomitant with increased resistant starch (RS) levels. These changes are possibly due to retrogradation. Retrograded resistant starch (RRS) values increased with storage time; in some samples, RRS represented more than 75% of total RS whereas in others it only accounted for 25%. The digestion rate (DR) in the freshly prepared tortillas was similar for the various samples, but after 72 h storage some differences among tortillas were found. Also, when a single tortilla sample was compared throughout the different storage times, lower DRs were determined in samples subjected to prolonged storage, which is related to the concomitant increase in RRS. The differences found among the various tortilla samples may be due to minor variations in the commercial processing conditions and to the use of different corn varieties.
publisher Sociedad Latinoamericana de Nutrición
publishDate 2005
url http://ve.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0004-06222005000100012
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