Abstract: | Pioneer 8500, a red hard sorghum hybrid, was steeped batchwise using three steeping solutions at 50°C: SO2 solution; SO2 solution containing 1.25% (w/w) of a commercial multiple‐enzyme preparation (Novo SP249); and SO2 solution with the addition of 0.5% (w/w) lactic acid. Novo SP249 contained pectolytic, cellulolytic, hemicellulolytic, and proteolytic activities and small amounts of saccharolytic activities. Three SO2 concentrations (0.1, 0.2, and 0.3% w/v) prepared by dissolving sodium bisulfite in distilled water and three steeping times (24, 36, and 48 hr) were used. Incorporation of multiple enzymes into the SO2 resulted in an increase in starch yield with reduced protein content compared with the SO2 solution alone. The best wet‐milling performance for sorghum resulted from the SO2 solution containing 0.5% lactic acid; it produced the whitest starch with the highest yield and the lowest protein content. Both higher SO2 concentration of the steeping solution and longer steeping time led to higher starch yield, lower protein content in starch, and whiter starch. However, no significant differences in starch yield, protein content in starch, and starch color occurred between SO2 concentrations of 0.2 and 0.3% for all three steeping solutions. The optimum steeping process for wet milling of sorghum was using a 0.2% SO2 solution with 0.5% lactic acid for 36 hr at 50°C. Under these conditions, the starch yield, protein content in starch, and L value of starch color were 60.2% (db), 0.49% (db), and 92.7, respectively, which were not significantly different from the best values from the 48‐hr steeping using the solution with 0.3% SO2 and 0.5% lactic acid. |