The commonest digestible polysaccharide in plants is starch. Starch can be found in all organs of most higher plants, organs and tissues containing starch granules include pollen, leaves, stems, woody tissues, roots, tubers, bulbs, rhizomes, fruits, flowers and the pericarp, cotyledons, embryo and endosperm of seeds.
Starch molecules are polymers of anhydroglucose and occur in both linear and branched form.
The amylose molecule is a linear, unbranched structure in which the glucose residues are attached solely through a-1,4 glycosidic bonds.
Amylopectin, on the other hand, is a branched-chain polymer, the branch points occurring through a-1,6 glycosidic bonds.
The stored starch provides the plants with a spruce of energy when they need it later, keeping them alive though the winter and fueling their reproduction the following spring.
It’s what makes starchy vegetables, legumes and grains so healthy to eat.
The enzymes in human saliva and intestine breaks down the long carbohydrate chains, turning them back into simple sugars.
Food starches are commercially manufactured and available for use in products such as baked food, beverages, canned, frozen, and glassed foods, confections, dairy products, dry goods, meat products and snack food.
What is starch?
Rising Global Meat Consumption: Drivers, Impacts, and the Shift Toward
Sustainable Alternatives
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The global consumption of meat has surged over the past few decades, driven
by population growth, urbanization, and rising incomes. With urban
migration an...