Physical and Chemical Characteristics of Jackfruit (Artocarpus heterophyllus Lamk.) Seeds Flour Produced Under Fermentation Process by Lactobacillus plantarum
Abstract
Jackfruit seed is a potential local food source, which can be derived as flour. However, this seed contains several
oligosaccharides such as raffinose and stachyose, which can cause flatulence for humans, and these substances will also create a
darker color during flour processing. Effort to reduce this type of oligosaccharides is reported here by introducing fermentation
technique using Lactobacillus plantarum. The aim of this study is to determine the physical and chemical characteristics of
jackfruit seed flour fermented by fermentation process for 32 hours incubation time. The results showed that the jackfruit seed
flour after fermentation processes have different characteristics compare to that of non-fermented one. The degree of whiteness
of jackfruit flour produced under longer time of incubation during fermentation were higher compare to that of shorter duration.
Based on the result of FTIR analysis, starch structure differences could not be seen between flour produced from fermentation
process and without fermentation. It means that the fermentation process by L. plantarum were not able to change the structure or
the degree of polymerization of the starch molecules. The only changes observed were the differences of the oligosaccharides
content. The more incubation time assigned, the higher the amount of raffinose detected in the flour, followed by the decrease of
the bigger oligosaccharides content such as stachyose and verbascose, as has been shown by HPLC chromatogram, which
indicate that enzyme produced by L. plantarum during fermentation process is able to degrade bigger oligosaccharides rather
than raffinose.
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- LSP-Conference Proceeding [1874]