Carbohydrates: Sugars, Starches, Pectins, and Other Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates: Sugars, Starches, Pectins, and Other Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates: Sugars, Starches, Pectins, and Other Carbohydrates
Organic compounds
Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen
Simple or complex
Source of energy or fiber
Important food CHOs - Sugars, dextrins,
starches, celluloses, hemicellulose, pectins,
gums
FUNCTIONS
SWEETENERS
THICKENERS
STABILIZERS
GELLING AGENTS
FAT REPLACERS
MONOSACCHARIDES
SIMPLE SUGARS
MOST COMMON - 5 OR 6 CARBON
GLUCOSE
Dextrose
Naturally present in fruit
Basic unit for starches
Less sweet than fructose
Used in food industry because of water
holding properties and ability to control
crystals
Food for yeast
FRUCTOSE
Levulose
Part of sucrose
Sweetest of all sugars
In many fruits
Very soluble
Not easily crystallized
Glucose isomerase to change glucose to
fructose
GALACTOSE
Table sugar
From sugar cane or sugar beet
Glucose + fructose
Invert sugar important in controlling
crystallization
Most common disaccharide
MALTOSE
Glucose + glucose
Product of starch breakdown
Corn syrup
Flavoring and coloring agent in beer,
candies, shakes
LACTOSE
Glucose + galactose
Milk sugar
Extracted from solutions of whey
Not broken down or fermented by yeast
Does not react in batter leavened with
baking soda or baking powder
Available for Maillard reaction so added
to bakery products for browning
DISACCHARIDES
PROPERTIES OF
SUGAR
SOLUBILITY
Solution in foods
Varying degrees of solubility for
monosaccharides and disaccahrides
As temperature increases greater the
amount of sugar that dissolves
Slow heating increases the solubility
As concentration increases boiling point
increases
Each gram molecular weight of sucrose
increases boiling point 0.940F (0.520C)
Can use temperature to determine sucrose
concentration
SATURATION
CANDIES
CRYSTALLINE CANDIES
Generally soft
Smooth, creamy with tiny crystals that
cannot be detected with the tongue
Fondant and fudge
Use interfering agent to prevent early
crystallization
Must concentrate solution-test
temperature to determine concentration
Complete solution of crystalline sugar
INTERFERING AGENT
Genetic manipulation
Form films and bind other ingredients
PECTINS AND GUMS
Polysaccharides
Plant tissue
Used as gelling agents, thickeners,
stabilizers
PECTIC SUBSTANCES
Part of primary cell wall
Hold cells together, hold skin on fruit
Protopectin - immature fruits
Pectinic acid- mature fruit, includes
pectins
Pectic acid - over ripe fruit
PECTIN
Dispersible in water
Forms a sol
Can be converted to a gel in the
presence of water with addition of sugar
or acid
Attraction to water is decreased
Pectin under skin of fruits melts with heat
application (peel tomatoes, etc)
PECTINS
Commercially extracted from apple cores
and skins; form white inner skin of citrus
fruits
Boiling too long - depolymerization
occurs, gel may not set
Boiling too short - insufficient invert
sugar formed, sucrose may crystallize
GUMS
All are colloidal polymers (too large to dissolve)
All are very hydrophilic
All are thickeners in water dispersions
Galactose most common sugar
All are polysaccharides – EXCEPT for gelatin
Examples: Guar gum, gum arabic, carob bean
gum, carageenan, agar, xanthan gum
USES
Thickening agents replacing starch
Stabilizers of emulsions
Maintain smooth texture of products like
ice cream
All do not form gels