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Molecular weight distribution and viscosity of water-soluble dietary fibre isolated from green beans, Brussels sprouts and green peas following different types of processing

Nyman, Margareta LU ; Svanberg, Maria LU and Asp, Nils-Georg LU (1994) In Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture 66(1). p.83-91
Abstract

The molecular weight distribution and the viscosity of water‐soluble dietary fibre polysaccharides isolated from green beans, Brussels sprouts and green peas were investigated following boiling, microwave treatment and canning. Blanching was used as a reference process. In green beans and Brussels sprouts microwave treatment had minor effects, while there generally was a small decrease of neutral sugars with boiling. The influence of canning was more pronounced and a decrease of uronic acid‐containing polymers in the high‐molecular‐weight fraction was obtained, simultaneously as the amount in the middle toed fraction increased. Further, in green beans there also seemed to be a loss of polymers containing galactose and uronic acids into... (More)

The molecular weight distribution and the viscosity of water‐soluble dietary fibre polysaccharides isolated from green beans, Brussels sprouts and green peas were investigated following boiling, microwave treatment and canning. Blanching was used as a reference process. In green beans and Brussels sprouts microwave treatment had minor effects, while there generally was a small decrease of neutral sugars with boiling. The influence of canning was more pronounced and a decrease of uronic acid‐containing polymers in the high‐molecular‐weight fraction was obtained, simultaneously as the amount in the middle toed fraction increased. Further, in green beans there also seemed to be a loss of polymers containing galactose and uronic acids into the process water with boiling and canning, respectively. In peas, there was an increase of the fraction containing middle‐sized polymers (uronic acids and arabinose) with all processes. With microwave treatment there was a simultaneous loss in the high‐molecular‐weight fraction, whereas no such decrease could be obtained with boiling or canning. The lowest viscosity was obtained in extracts from canned materials and the highest with blanching, while boiling and microwave treatment had various effects in different vegetables. The soluble fibre fraction of blanched green beans had a higher viscosity than that of Brussels sprouts and green peas. Thus, both amount and properties—molecular weight distribution and viscosity—of soluble fibre in vegetables were affected by processing, but differently in various vegetables.

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publication status
published
subject
keywords
blanching, boiling, canning, gas chromatography, gel‐filtration, microwave treatment, molecular weight distribution, processing, vegetables, viscosity, water‐soluble dietary fibre
in
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture
volume
66
issue
1
pages
9 pages
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:84988147958
ISSN
0022-5142
DOI
10.1002/jsfa.2740660113
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
fd7c405e-20d1-418b-a069-93ffaf4c209b
date added to LUP
2018-10-16 19:27:59
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2023-04-08 19:46:44
@article{fd7c405e-20d1-418b-a069-93ffaf4c209b,
  abstract     = {{<p>The molecular weight distribution and the viscosity of water‐soluble dietary fibre polysaccharides isolated from green beans, Brussels sprouts and green peas were investigated following boiling, microwave treatment and canning. Blanching was used as a reference process. In green beans and Brussels sprouts microwave treatment had minor effects, while there generally was a small decrease of neutral sugars with boiling. The influence of canning was more pronounced and a decrease of uronic acid‐containing polymers in the high‐molecular‐weight fraction was obtained, simultaneously as the amount in the middle toed fraction increased. Further, in green beans there also seemed to be a loss of polymers containing galactose and uronic acids into the process water with boiling and canning, respectively. In peas, there was an increase of the fraction containing middle‐sized polymers (uronic acids and arabinose) with all processes. With microwave treatment there was a simultaneous loss in the high‐molecular‐weight fraction, whereas no such decrease could be obtained with boiling or canning. The lowest viscosity was obtained in extracts from canned materials and the highest with blanching, while boiling and microwave treatment had various effects in different vegetables. The soluble fibre fraction of blanched green beans had a higher viscosity than that of Brussels sprouts and green peas. Thus, both amount and properties—molecular weight distribution and viscosity—of soluble fibre in vegetables were affected by processing, but differently in various vegetables.</p>}},
  author       = {{Nyman, Margareta and Svanberg, Maria and Asp, Nils-Georg}},
  issn         = {{0022-5142}},
  keywords     = {{blanching; boiling; canning; gas chromatography; gel‐filtration; microwave treatment; molecular weight distribution; processing; vegetables; viscosity; water‐soluble dietary fibre}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{01}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{83--91}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture}},
  title        = {{Molecular weight distribution and viscosity of water-soluble dietary fibre isolated from green beans, Brussels sprouts and green peas following different types of processing}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jsfa.2740660113}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/jsfa.2740660113}},
  volume       = {{66}},
  year         = {{1994}},
}