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Scarification and Degermination of Sorghum for Grits Production: Effects of Hybrid and Conditioning
Author(s) -
Suroso Janti,
Flores Rolando A.,
Boyer John E.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
cereal chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.558
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1943-3638
pISSN - 0009-0352
DOI - 10.1094/cchem.2000.77.6.808
Subject(s) - sorghum , endosperm , chemistry , hybrid , tempering , conditioning , food science , abrasive , agronomy , metallurgy , mathematics , materials science , biology , biochemistry , statistics
ABSTRACT Three sorghum hybrids were tempered and decorticated with an abrasive‐type mill (scarifier) to produce low‐ash and low‐fat grits. The effects of tempering time and temperature were investigated, and the optimum tempering conditions for obtaining low‐ash and low‐fat grits were found for each sorghum hybrid. The conditions were 3 min at 30°C for bronze sorghum with heteroyellow endosperm, 40 min at 40°C for white sorghum with white endosperm, and 10 min at 20°C for red sorghum with white endosperm. The grits yields were low using the scarifier, hence, another abrasive‐type mill was investigated for improving grits yields. A modified experimental corn decorticator‐degerminator was used to dry‐mill the three sorghum hybrids tempered to the optimum conditions found with the scarifier. The yields were 45.3% grits with 0.23% ash and 0.18% fat for the bronze/heteroyellow hybrid, 49.1% grits with 0.22% ash and 0.36% fat for white/white hybrid, and 44.2% grits with 0.20% ash and 0.22% fat for red/white hybrid. This study showed that grits yields were higher and ash and fat contents were lower when sorghum was processed with the decorticator‐degerminator than with the scarifier under the same optimum conditioning.