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starch |
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starchWidely distributed, high-molecular-mass carbohydrate, produced by plants as a food store; main dietary sources are cereals, legumes, and tubers, including potatoes. It consists of varying proportions of two glucose polymers (polysaccharides): straight-chain (amylose) and branched (amylopectin) molecules. Purified starch is a white powder used to stiffen textiles and paper and as a raw material for making various chemicals. It is used in the food industry as a thickening agent. Chemical treatment of starch gives rise to a range of ‘modified starches’ with varying properties. Hydrolysis (splitting) of starch by acid or enzymes generates a variety of ‘glucose syrups’ or ‘liquid glucose’ for use in the food industry. Complete hydrolysis of starch with acid generates the monosaccharide glucose only. Incomplete hydrolysis or enzymic hydrolysis yields a mixture of glucose, maltose, and nonhydrolysed fractions called dextrins. The chemical test for starch consists of adding a drop of iodine solution to the substance. It will turn bright blue if starch is present.
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| And I, the long time intimate of John Barleycorn, knew just what he promised me--maggots of fancy, dreams of power, forgetfulness, anything and everything save whirling washers, revolving mangles, humming centrifugal wringers, and fancy starch and interminable processions of duck trousers moving in steam under my flying iron. The mountain of fancy starch had been demolished--all save the few remnants, here and there, on the boards, where the ironers still labored. I should like to shake the starch out of some of them, and the dust out of the others. |
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