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Significance of Starch Properties and Quantity on Sponge Cake Volume

May 2014 Volume 91 Number 3
Pages 280 — 285
Hyun-Wook Choi1,2 and Byung-Kee Baik3,4

Korea Food Research Institute, Sungnam, Republic of Korea, 463-746. School of Food Science, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164. USDA-ARS Soft Wheat Quality Laboratory, 1680 Madison Ave., Wooster, OH 44691. Corresponding author. Phone: (330) 263-3891. Fax: (330) 263-3651. E-mail: byungkee.baik@ars.usda.gov


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Accepted January 3, 2014.
ABSTRACT

We evaluated the qualitative and quantitative effects of wheat starch on sponge cake (SC) baking quality. Twenty wheat flours, including soft white and club wheat of normal, partial waxy, and waxy endosperm, as well as hard wheat, were tested for amylose content, pasting properties, and SC baking quality. Starches isolated from wheat flours of normal, single-null partial waxy, double-null partial waxy, and waxy endosperm were also tested for pasting properties and baked into SC. Double-null partial waxy and waxy wheat flours produced SC with volume of 828–895 mL, whereas volume of SC baked from normal and single-null partial waxy wheat flours ranged from 1,093 to 1,335 mL. The amylose content of soft white and club wheat flour was positively related to the volume of SC (r = 0.790, P < 0.001). Pasting temperature, peak viscosity, final viscosity, breakdown, and setback also showed significant relationships with SC volume. Normal and waxy starch blends having amylose contents of 25, 20, 15, and 10% produced SCs with volume of 1,570, 1,435, 1,385, and 1,185 mL, respectively. At least 70 g of starch or at least 75% starch in 100 g of starch–gluten blend in replacement of 100 g of wheat flour in the SC baking formula was needed to produce SC having the maximum volume potential. Starch properties including amylose content and pasting properties as well as proportion of starch evidently play significant roles in SC baking quality of wheat flour.



This article is in the public domain and not copyrightable. It may be freely reprinted with customary crediting of the source. AACC International, Inc., 2014.