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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Thermal and rheological properties of batter systems

Xue, Jun, 1966- January 2007 (has links)
Batters are highly complex systems with wide ranging ingredients including flours, water, flavorings, and spices. Interactions between the ingredients determine the performance of batters and the final quality of coated products. Addition of hydrocolloids into batters of different types of flour provides special effects on batter performance. The functionalities of hydrocolloids-flour mixtures in terms of the thermal and rheological properties of the resulting batter systems were investigated in this study. / The rheological properties of the batter were determined using a strain/stress control rheometer. A steady state method was used to measure the viscosity as a function of the shear rate varying from 0.5 to 150 s-1 at 15°C. The resulting data was then fitted to the Herschel-Bulkley Model. The viscoelastic properties were monitored as a function of temperature and were determined using a dynamic oscillatory test. Two different temperature profiles were used to simulate cooking and storage processes. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) was used to determine thermal properties (namely glass transition temperature, gelatinization temperature, ice melting temperature, and enthalpy) and to describe the phase transitions that occur during heating and cooling processes. / The rheological and thermal properties varied for different types of flours and their combination ratios, as well as different types of hydrocolloids at different concentrations. The replacement of corn flour greatly altered the viscosity and viscoelastic properties of wheat based and rice based batter systems. Using 100% corn flour based batter showed highest yield stress, whereas 100% rice flour based batter did not show any yield stress. Higher temperatures and longer times were required to gelatinize starch at the higher levels of rice flour for each batter system flour mix combination. The various combination ratios of the flours apparently did not significant influence the gelatinization temperatures of the batter systems. However they significantly influence the total enthalpies (DeltaHG) of the various samples. Wheat flour based batters showed the lowest glass transition temperatures. Thermal properties of wheat-based batters were influenced by the replacement of wheat with rice or corn flours. Corn flour based batters required considerably more energy for gelatinization during the cooking process. / Hydrocolloids lowered flow behavior index (n) and increased the consistency index (k) of all batters. The gums also changed the onset temperature of structure development and the storage and loss moduli of the batter systems. Hydrocolloids greatly influenced the thermal properties of batter systems. The gums shifted gelatinization temperature and depressed glass transition temperature of resulting batter systems. Further, MC increased the melting temperature (Tm) for the test batter systems as compared with the values for the control system without methylcellulose (MC). Carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) did not show statistically significant effects on the total enthalpies of ice melting for all samples. However, MC and CMC showed more pronounced effects on rice, corn, and their combined flour based batters than it did on wheat flour based batters. However, this characteristic does not show in batter systems containing xanthan gum.
2

Thermal and rheological properties of batter systems

Xue, Jun, 1966- January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
3

The tolerance of some batters and doughs for fortification with non-fat dried milk solids

Aydlett, Elizabeth Lamb 08 September 2012 (has links)
The merits of fortifying baked products such as biscuits, chocolate cakes, muffins, and yeast rolls with non-fat dried milk solids at six concentrations were compared. Baked products were used because the majority of older people consume fairly large quantities of them, and this group of people needs added milk in their diets. / Master of Science

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