influence of moisture content and cooking on the screw pressing and prepressing of corn oil from corn germ

Samples of corn germ were obtained from a commercial corn wet mill (factory dried to about 3% moisture) and a commerical corn dry mill (undried, produced in the mill with about 13% moisture). The germ samples (200 g each) were cooked for various times in either a conventional oven at 180°C or a micr...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society 2005-11, Vol.82 (11), p.851-854
Hauptverfasser: Moreau, R.A, Johnston, D.B, Hicks, K.B
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Samples of corn germ were obtained from a commercial corn wet mill (factory dried to about 3% moisture) and a commerical corn dry mill (undried, produced in the mill with about 13% moisture). The germ samples (200 g each) were cooked for various times in either a conventional oven at 180°C or a microwave oven at 1500 W. Bench‐scale single screw pressing was then performed. With the dry milled corn germ, no oil was obtained from the uncooked germ. A maximal yield of about 5% oil [26% of total oil recovery (TOR), relative to hexane extraction] was obtained by cooking the dry‐milled germ for 6.5 min in a conventional oven at 180°C before pressing. A maximal yield of about 7% oil (37% TOR) was obtained by cooking the dry‐milled germ for 4.5 min in a microwave oven at 1500 W before pressing. With the wet‐milled germ, yields of about 7% oil (18% TOR) were obtained with the uncooked germ and yields increased to a maximum of about 22% oil (56% TOR) by cooking in a conventional oven at 180°C for 5 min or a maximum of about 17% oil (44% TOR) by cooking for 4 min in a microwave oven at 1500 W. These results indicate that microwave and conventional oven cooking are both effective pretreatments before pressing. Microwave preheating resulted in higher oil yields with dry‐milled germ, and conventional oven pretreatment resulted in higher oil yields with factory‐dried wet‐milled corn germ.
ISSN:0003-021X
1558-9331
DOI:10.1007/s11746-005-1154-6