Cassava Starch and Its Uses
Cassava Starch and Its Uses
Cassava Starch and Its Uses
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The flour produced from the cassava plant, which on account of its low content of
noncarbohydrate constituents might well be called a starch, is known in world trade as
tapioca flour. It is used directly, made into a group of baked or gelatinized products or
manufactured into glucose, dextrins and other products.
Starchy foods have always been one of the staples of the human diet. They are mostly
consumed in starch-bearing plants or in foods to which commercial starch or its
derivatives have been added. The first starch was probably obtained from wheat by
the Egyptians for food and for binding fibres to make papyrus paper as early as 40003500 B.C.
Starches are now made in many countries from many different starchy raw materials,
such as wheat, barley, maize, rice, white or sweet potatoes, cassava, sago palm and
waxy xaize. Althbugh they have similar chemical reactions and are usually
interchangeable, starches from different sources have different granular structures
which affect their physical properties.
Starch and starch products are used in many food and nonfood industries and as
chemical raw materials for many other purposes, as in plastics and the tanning of
leather. Nonfood use of starches - such as coating, sizings and adhesives - accounts for
about 75 percent of the output of the commercial starch industry.
In many industrial applications, there is competition not only among starches from
various sources but also between starches and many other products. Resin glue has
largely replaced starch in plywood because of its greater resistance to moisture; resin
finishes are used in the textile industry and natural gums compete with starches in
paper making. Nevertheless, the continuous development of new products has enabled
the starch industry to continue its expansion. The growth of the starch industry in the
future appears to be very promising, providing the quality of products and the
development of new products permit them to compete with the various substitutes.
FOOD INDUSTRIES
The food industries are one of the largest consumers of starch and starch products. In
addition, large quantities of starch are sold in the form of products sold in small
packages for household cooking. Cassava, sago and other tropical starches were
extensively used for food prior to the Second World War, but their volume declined
owing to the disruption of world trade caused by the war. Attempts were made to
develop waxy maize as a replacement for normal noncereal starches; but the
production of cassava starch has increased considerably in recent years.
Unmodified starch, modified starch and glucose are used in the food industry for one
or more of the following purposes:
(a) directly as cooked starch food, custard and other forms;
(b) thickener using the paste properties of starch (soups, baby foods, sauces and
gravies, etc.);
(c) filler contributing to the solid content of soups, pills and tablets and other
pharmaceutical products, fee cream, etc.;
(d) binder, to consolidate the mass and prevent it from drying out during cooking
(sausages and processed meats);
(e) stabilizer, owing to the high water-holding capacity of starch (e.g., in fee cream).
Bakery products
Although starch is the major constituent of flours, the art of' bread baking depends to
a large extent on the selection of flour with the proper gluten characteristics. Starch is
used in biscuit making, to increase volume and crispness. In Malaysia, cassava starch
is used in sweetened and unsweetened biscuits and in cream sandwiches at the rate of
5-10 percent in order to soften zyestexture. add taste and render the biscuit nonstickv.
The use of dextrose in some kinds of yeast-raised bread and bakery products has
certain advantages as it is readily available lo the yeast and the resulting fermentation
is quick and complete. It also imparts a golden brown colour to the crust and permits
longer conservation.
Confectioneries
In addition to the widespread use of dextrose and glucose syrup as sweetening agents
in confectioneries. starch and modified starches are also used in the manufacture of
many types of candies such as jellybeans. toffee. hard and soft gums, boiled sweets
(hard candy). fondants and Turkish delight. In confectioneries. starch is used
principally in the manufacture of gums. pastes and other types of sweets as an
ingredient, in the making of moulds or for dusting sweets to prevent them from
sticking together. Dextrose prevents crystallization in boiled sweets and reduces
hvdroscopicity in the finished product.
The commercial manufacture of glucose sugars from starch began during the
Napoleonic Wars with England, when suppliers of sucrose sugar were cut off from
France by sea blockade. Rapid progress was made in its production in the United
States about the middle of the nineteenth century.
At present, glucose is usually produced as a syrup or as a solid. The physical
properties of the syrup vary with the dextrose equivalent (DE) and the method of
manufacture. Dextrose equivalent is the total reducing sugars expressed as dextrose
and calculated as a percentage of the total dry substance. Glucose is the common
name for the syrup and dextrose for the solid sugar. Dextrose, sometimes called grape
sugar, is the D-glucose produced by the complete hydrolysis of starch.
Starch hydrolysis
Two methods for starch hydrolysis are used today for the commercial production of
glucose: acid hydrolysis and partial acid hydrolysis followed by an enzyme
conversion.
Acidification is the conversion of starch into glucose sugar by acid hydrolysis. This
operation is carried out in batches or a continuous process. In the first process, the
starch slurry, 20-21Be, is mixed with hydrochloric acid (sulfuric acid is sometimes
used) to bring the pH to around 1.8-2.0 in a steam converter and heated to about
160C until the desired DE is reached. The continuous process, which is replacing the
batch process, involves feeding the mixture of starch slurry and hydrochloric acid into
a tubular heat-exchanger. The time and temperature of the process are adjusted to the
desired DE in the end product.
In the next step, neutralization, the acidified mixture is neutralized with sodium
carbonate or soda ash to remove the free acid and bring the pH value to 5.0 7.0.
Sodium chloride is formed in the syrup in small quantities as a result of the
neutralization of the hydrochloric acid by the sodium carbonate and remains in
solution.
Refining follows. Some solids - impurities, precipitated protein and coagulated fat can be removed by centrifugal separation. Impurities will depend largely on the starch
used and its purity. The solution is then passed through filters (filter presses or candletype ceramic filters).
The clear brown filtrate is decolourized by passing it through tanks of activated
carbon, which removes colours and other impurities from the solution by surface
adsorption but has no effect on the sugar.
The starch used in the manufacture of glucose syrup must be as pure as possible with
a low protein content (particularly soluble protein). In this respect, cassava starch can
be preferable to other starches.
There is an increasing interest in manufacturing glucose syrup directly from starchy
roots or grains rather than from the separated starch in order to save on capital
investments for the production and purification of starch from such raw materials.
The starch conversion industry (glucose and dextrose) is the largest single consumer
of starch, utilizing about 60 percent of total starch production. Glucose syrup and
crystalline dextrose compete with sucrose sugar and are used in large quantities in
fruit canning, confectioneries, jams, jellies, preserves, ice cream, bakery products,
pharmaceuticals, beverages and alcoholic fermentation.
The functional purpose of glucose and dextrose in the confectionery industry is to
prevent crystallization of the sucrose; in the bakery products industry it is to supply
fermentable carbohydrates; and in the ice-cream, fruit-preserves and similar industries
it is to increase the solids without causing an undue increase in the total sweetness,
thus emphasizing the natural flavour of the fruit, and also to prevent the formation of
large ice crystals which mar the smooth texture.
In general, glucose and dextrose are used in the food industry as a partial or complete
substitute for sucrose. The use of dextrose has increased in recent years in the foodprocessing industries.
Cassava in composite flours
In many developing countries bread consumption is continually expanding and there
is increasing dependence on imported wheat. Most of these countries, however, grow
staples other than wheat that can be used for bread. Some grow various starchy tubers
such as cassava, yam or sweet potatoes and some others grow cereals such as maize,
millet or sorghum. It would therefore be economically advantageous for those
countries if imports of wheat could be reduced or even eliminated and the demand for
bread could be met by the use of domestically grown products instead of wheat.
The Composite Flour Programme initiated by the Food and Agriculture Organization
of the United Nations in 1964 was conceived primarily to develop bakery products
from locally available raw materials, particularly in those countries which could not
meet their wheat requirements. Although the bakery products obtained were of good
quality, similar in some of their main characteristics to wheat-flour bread, the texture
and palatability of the composite-flour bakery products were different from those
made from wheat flour. Bread made of nonglutenous flour has the crust and crumb
structure of cake rather than bread and may not be considered acceptable by people
who are accustomed to conventional bread.
The light, evenly structured bread made of wheat flour and the characteristic soft
crumb are due to the swelling properties of wheat-flour gluten in water. If pure starch
from another cereal or tuber is used, the product is considerably more rigid and its
texture is irregular because gases are insufficiently retained in the dough. Therefore,
when starches that do not contain gluten-forming proteins are used, a swelling or
binding agent must be added during the preparation of the dough to bind the starch
granules (i.e., egg white, gums, glyceryl monostearate).
Efforts have been made in many countries to produce bread by conventional methods
from wheat flour to which other flours such as cassava flour were added. It was
generally found that the upper limit of such an addition was about 10 percent as the
quality of the resultant bread was rapidly impaired beyond this limit of nonwheat flour
content. However, recent experiments have shown that it is possible to increase the
level of the nonwheat flour considerably without too great a change in the bread
characteristics, provided certain bread improvers such as calcium stearyl lactylate are
added or a relatively high percentage of fat and sugar is used. Bread of acceptable
quality was obtained by the use of 30 percent of either cassava or corn (maize) starch
and 70 percent wheat noun
Experiments made by the Institute of Food Technology in Rio de Janeiro show that 10
percent flour and 5 percent cassava or corn (maize) starch can be added to wheat flour
of only medium strength (9-11 percent gluten) and made into a dough containing only
I percent shortening which can be baked into loaves of as good quality and appearance
as those of the respective wheat-flour samples.
Other experiments in some countries have been undertaken to make bread from
nonwheat flours alone or mixed with wheat flour. Flours included cassava flour and
cassava starch and sources of proteins included full-fat and defatted oilseed flours
such as cottonseed, soybean and groundnut, as well as fish meal. In addition, binding
agents, water, salt and sugar were used. The proportion of the protein source to starch
was varied so as to ensure a protein content of 1820 percent in the composite flour.
Results of using nonwheat flours alone suggested that the combination of cassava
flour and cassava starch could be used in bread-making and that bread made from
cassava flour and defatted soybean flour was of good quality. From the nutritional
point of view, the protein quality of both the cassava-soya and the cassava-groundnut
breads was higher than that of common wheat bread. In general, as in normal breadmaking, the results depend on different factors operating in the bread-making
procedure and the quality of the raw materials.
In India, a new product called tapioca macaroni was developed by adding a small
percentage of specially prepared groundnut meal and wheat semolina to cassava flour.
The mixture is processed, cooked and consumed in the same way as foodgrains. The
protein content is comparable to that of wheat (about 10 percent) and the macaroni is
nearly twice as nutritious as rice.
The Food and Agriculture Organization has lately considered it desirable to
investigate the possibility of making bread and similar bakery products of raw
materials derived from starchy tubers and defatted oilseeds. An agreement was made
between the Organization and some well-known research institutions to study this
possibility. The following experiments have been realized:
(a) Development of a bread made from nonwheat materials at the Institute of Grain,
Flour and Bread (TNO), Wageningen, the Netherlands.
(b) Development of a bread with partial replacement of wheat flour at the Tropical
Products Institute, London.
MECHANICAL LEAVENING
Mechanical leavening of bread doughs is fast replacing conventional fermentation
systems. This process offers the advantages of simplification, elimination of bulk
fermentation and better uniformity of dough consistency besides the possibility of
utilizing weaker flours and starches with wheat flour. The Chorleywood Bread
Process, adopted in 1961, is used to produce the highest proportion of all the bread
consumed in the United Kingdom.
Experiments carried out by the British Arkady Co. Ltd., using mechanical leavening
rather than bulk fermentation for the ripening of the dough and a blend of 60 percent
wheat flour, 30 percent cassava starch and 10 percent soybean flour, produced a bread
of good quality almost equal to the normal wheat-flour bread in volume, appearance
and eating quality.
Several FAO-operated UNDP/SF projects concerned with the use of composite flours
in bread-making have been realized. Bakery products made from composite flours of
wheat (at least 75 percent) and potato, maize and cassava have been developed by an
experimental bakery in Campinas, State of So Paulo, Brazil. (Other projects
involving the use of flours other than cassava flour in bakery products have been
carried out in Niger, Senegal and Sudan.) The report of a joint FAO/UNDP mission in
Colombia recommended the establishment of an experimental bakery to determine the
suitability of locally available raw materials for the production of bakery products
from composite flours (e.g., cassava/soybean). The project was executed with FAO
participation under a bilateral agreement between Colombia and the Netherlands.
NUTRITIONAL VALUE OF COMPOSITE FLOURS
The nutritional value of bakery products made from composite flours was assessed in
1965 by the Central Institute for Nutrition and Food Research, (Utrecht, Zeist), where
the nutritional value of cassava/soya bread and cassava/groundnut bread was
compared with the protein quality of common wheat bread. It was concluded that the
protein quality of both breads was higher than that of common wheat bread. The
cassava/soya bread topped the other two breads in protein quality, while the
cassava/groundnut bread was slightly superior to common wheat bread.
In 1969 at the Queen Elizabeth College, London, breads produced at the British
Arkady Co. Ltd. were assessed. They were made from various composite flour
mixtures consisting of wheat flour, cassava starch, soya flour, millet and sorghum
flour and fish-protein concentrate in various proportions with mechanical leavening.
Results indicated that the protein value of the original bread had not been impaired by
supplementation, but showed improvement.
Prospects for commercial production and widespread consumption of bread made of
composite flours in different countries will depend upon local acceptance (taste and
characteristics of the bread) and the price at which the bread will be available to the
public.
Food habits are primarily based on socioeconomic and other conditions rather than on
scientific considerations. Changes in established habits can take place gradually
through public education and the spread of knowledge.
Cassava in animal feed
Cassava is widely used in most tropical areas for feeding pigs, cattle, sheep and
poultry. Dried peels of cassava roots are fed to sheep and goats, and raw or boiled
roots are mixed into a mash with protein concentrates such as maize, sorghum,
groundnut or oil-palm kernel meals and mineral salts for livestock feeding.
In many tropical regions, the leaves and stems of the cassava plant are considered a
waste product. However, analytical tests have proved that the leaves have a protein
content equivalent to that of alfalfa (about 17-20 percent). Feeding experiments also
showed that dehydrated cassava leaves are equivalent in feed value to alfalfa. Imports
of dehydrated alfalfa in the Far East, mainly in Japan, have reached about 240 000
tons a year. Therefore, a large potential exists for the exportation of dehydrated stems
and leaves of cassava.
In Brazil and many parts of southeast Asia, large quantities of cassava roots, stems
and leaves are chopped and mixed into a silage for the feeding of cattle and pigs. This
use of cassava is increasing.
Cassava, similar to feedgrains, consists almost entirely of starch and is easy to digest.
The roots are, therefore, especially suited to feeding young animals and fattening pigs.
Many feeding experiments have shown that cassava provides a good quality
carbohydrate which may be substituted for maize or barley and that cassava rations
are especially suitable for swine, dairy cattle and poultry. However, cassava cannot be
used as the sole feedstuff because of its deficiency in protein and vitamins, but must
be supplemented by other feeds that are rich in these elements.
The amount of cassava and its products fed to animals as scraps in the tropical regions
must be fairly large, but there is no way of estimating it. Barnyard fowls, goats and
pigs probably consume cassava roots and leaves regularly in many parts of the tropics,
but a true livestock feeding industry based on cassava has been developed only in very
few areas.
In the European Economic Community the highly developed compound animal-feed
industry uses dried cassava roots as an ingredient, and large quantities of cassava
chips, pellets and meal are imported into these countries for this purpose. The
composition of a compound animal feed varies according to the animal (cattle, pigs or
poultry) as well as to the kind of production (dairy, meat or eggs).
There are many constituents which can be used to supply the main elements in
compound feed, such as starch, protein, fat, minerals and vitamins. In general, oil
cakes are the main ingredients in the feedstuffs for cattle, while feedgrains are the
most important for pigs and poultry. Cassava products were long used as a raw
material for compound feedstuffs until their use declined after the Second World War,
when grains became cheaper than cassava products in Europe. When grain prices rose
again, cassava products were once more used extensively. The maximum content of
cassava products in compound feedstuffs is officially set in many countries. In the
Federal Republic of Germany, it varies according to the type, but is generally as
follows: 10-40 percent for pigs, 20-25 percent for cattle and 10-20 percent for poultry;
in the Netherlands and Belgium, however, the figures are much lower.
At present many large manufacturers are equipped with electronic computers to
determine the composition of compounds in terms of feed values and price.
Nonfood uses
Starch makes a good natural adhesive. There are two types of adhesives made of
starches, modified starches and dextrins: roll-dried adhesives and liquid adhesives.
The application of cassava in adhesives continues to be one of the most important end
uses of the product. In the manufacture of glue the starch is simply gelatinized in hot
water or with the help of chemicals. For conversion into dextrin it is subjected
separately or simultaneously to the disintegrative action of chemicals, heat and
enzymes.
In gelatinized starch adhesives, quality requirements are such that the medium-quality
flours can be used. In dextrin manufacture, the demands are much more exacting: only
the purest flours with a low acid factor are acceptable. Cassava dextrin is preferred in
remoistening gums for stamps, envelope flaps and so on because of its adhesive
properties and its agreeable taste and odour.
Dextrins were accidentally discovered in 1821 when during a fire in a Dublin
(Ireland) textile mill one of the workmen noticed that some of the starch had turned
brown with the heat and dissolved easily in water to form a thick adhesive paste.
Three primary groups of dextrins are now known: British gums, white dextrins and
yellow dextrins.
British gums are formed by heating the starch alone or in the presence of small
amounts of alkaline buffer salts to a temperature range of about 180220C. The final
products range in colour from light to very dark brown. They give aqueous solutions
with lower viscosities than starch.
White dextrins are prepared by mild heating of the starch with a relatively large
amount of added catalyst, such as hydrochloric acid, at a low temperature of 80120C for short periods of time. The final product is almost white, has very limited
solubility in water and retains to varying degrees the set-back tendency of the original
starch paste.
Yellow dextrins are formed when lower acid or catalyst levels are used with higher
temperatures of conversion (150-220C) for longer conversion times. They are
soluble in water, form solutions of low viscosity and are light yellow to brown in
colour.
The following are some of the major uses of dextrins in nonfood industries.
Cassava starch has been widely used as a tub size and beater size in the manufacture
of paper, in the past mainly on account of its low price. A high colour (whiteness), low
dirt and fibre content, and, above all, uniformity of lots are needed in this instance.
An important new application of starch is in the machine-coating of magazine paper,
formerly done exclusively with caseins. There are indications that cassava is
particularly well suited to the purpose; however, definite specifications for the starch
still have to be worked out.
Textile industry. In the textile industry, starches occupy an important place in such
operations as warp sizing, cloth finishing and printing. Warp sizing is the application
of a protective coating to prevent the single yarns from disintegrating during weaving.
The size consists of an adhesive and a lubricant and is generally removed after
weaving. Cloth finishing alters the "feel" of the fabric by making it firmer, stiffer and
heavier. Cassava starch is also used for cloth printing or producing certain designs in
various colours on the smooth surface of a finished fabric. While cassava accounted
for about 20 percent of all starch for these purposes in 1937, it has been largely
replaced by other starches after the Second World War.
An exception is the manufacture of felt, where cassava continues to be used
exclusively in the finishing process.
Wood furniture. Before the Second World War the manufacture of plywood and veneer
relied mainly on cassava as a glue. The basic material in this case is gelatinized at
room temperature with about double the amount of a solution of sodium hydroxide.
After prolonged kneading of the very stiff paste in order to give it the required stringy
consistency, the glue is applied to the wood with rollers. As the presence of a certain
amount of the pulp is useful, medium- to low-quality flours are acceptable or even
preferable, although the presence of sand is objectionable.
Since 1945, however, the use of cassava as a glue has declined to second place owing
to the increasing success of water-resistant plastics.
Particle board from cassava stalks
As cassava cultivation increases, more stalks will become available for disposal. The
Tropical Products Institute, London, has been working on the utilization of the
cassava plant. Particle boards could be made from cassava stalks by cutting them into
small sections and mixing them with certain resins. The strength of the board can be
varied by altering the resin content or the density.
Fermented products
CASSAVA ALCOHOL
Cassava is one of the richest fermentable substances for the production of alcohol.
The fresh roots contain about 30 percent starch and 5 percent sugars, and the dried
roots contain about 80 percent fermentable substances which are equivalent to rice as
a source of alcohol.
Ethyl alcohol is produced from many carbohydrate materials. In Malaysia and some
other countries, many factories are equipped to use cassava roots, starch or molasses
(by-product of the sugar industry), the type of product depending on the costs of the
raw materials. When cassava is used, the roots are washed, crushed into a thin pulp
and then screened. Saccharification is carried out by adding sulfuric acid to the pulp in
pressure cookers until total sugars reach 15-17 percent of the contents. The pH value
is adjusted by using sodium carbonate, and then yeast fermentation is allowed for
three to four days at a suitable temperature for the production of alcohol, carbon
dioxide and small amounts of other substances from sugar. Alcohol is then separated
by heat distillation. The yield of conversion is about 70-110 litres of absolute alcohol
per ton of cassava roots depending on the variety and method of manufacture. The
crude alcohol of cassava is described as average in quality. It has a disagreeable odour,
but can be improved if the first and last fractions in the distillation process are
discarded. It is usually utilized for industrial purposes, as in cosmetics, solvents and
pharmaceutical products. If the production is required for human consumption, special
care should be taken in handling the roots to rid them of hydrocyanic acid.
DRIED YEAST
Microbial protein is attracting growing interest owing to the enormous protein
requirements of the world. Among the microorganisms which are considered possible
food sources, yeast has perhaps stirred the greatest interest. Candida and
saccharomyces yeasts have had a well-established place for many years as feed, and
the technology of production, the composition and the nutritive value of yeast are well
known.
Most of the production of yeast is based on such low-cost raw materials as waste
liquids, wood hydrolyzates and molasses. Starch-rich plant materials from wastes or
surplus production are also utilized as substrata for yeast production. Cassava starch
and cassava roots are being used in Malaysia and some other countries for the
production of yeasts for animal feed' the human diet and for bakery yeast. The starch
is hydrolyzed into simple sugars (predominantly glucose) by means of mineral acid or
by enzymes. Certain yeasts are then propagated which assimilate the simple sugars
and produce microbial cellular substances. The dry, inactive yeast contains about 7
percent moisture and the raw protein content can vary between 40 and 50 percent
depending on the raw material.
The yield of yeast production also depends on the raw material. In some applications
of cassava starch conversion into substances obtained from yeasts, a 38-42 percent
yield of yeast product containing 50 percent raw protein has been obtained.