Online Encyclopedia

ARROWROOT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 650 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

ARROWROOT  . A large proportion of the edible starches obtained from the rhizomes or

root-
See also:
stocks of various
See also:
plants are known in commerce under the name of arrowroot . Properly the name should be restricted to the
See also:
starch yielded by two or three
See also:
species of Maranta (nat. ord . Marantaceae), the chief of which is Arrowroot Plant (Maranta arundinacea).—Fig. r, stem, leaves and flowers; fig . 2, tubers . M. arundinacea; and when genuine or West
See also:
Indian arrowroot is spoken of, it is understood that this is the variety meant . Maranta arundinacea is probably a native of Guiana and western Brazil, but it has long been cultivated in the West Indian Islands, and has now spread to most tropical countries . The plant is a herbaceous perennial with a creeping root-stock which gives off fleshy cylindrical branches or tubers, covered with pale brown or white scales and afterwards ringed with their scars . It is at the period when these tubers are gorged with starch, immediately before the season of rest, that it is ripe for use . In addition to about 25% of starch, the tubers contain a proportion of woody tissue,
See also:
vegetable albumen and various salts . The arrowroot may be separated on a small scale in the same manner as potato-starch is frequently prepared, that is, by peeling the root and grating it in
See also:
water, when the starch falls to the bottom . The liquor is then drained off, and the starch purified by repeated washings till it is ready for drying .

On a large scale the manufacture of arrowroot is conducted with specially arranged machinery . The rhizomes when dug up are washed

See also:
free of earthy impurities and afterwards skinned . Subsequently, according to Pereira's Materia Medica, " the carefully skinned tubers are washed, then ground in a mill, and the pulp washed in tinned-copper cylindrical washing-
See also:
machines . The fecula (dim. of
See also:
Lat. faex, dregs, or sediment) is subsequently dried in drying-houses . In order to obtain the fecula free from impurity, pure water must be used, and
See also:
great care and attention paid in every step of the
See also:
process . The skinning or peeling of the tubers must be performed with great nicety, as the cuticle contains a resinous
See also:
matter which imparts colour and a disagreeable flavour to the starch . German-
See also:
silver palettes are used for skinning the deposited fecula, and shovels of the same metal for packing the dried fecula . The drying is effected in pans, covered with white
See also:
gauze to exclude dust and
See also:
insects." Arrowroot is distinguished by the granules agglomerating into small balls, by slightly crepitating when rubbed between the fingers, and by yielding with boiling water a
See also:
fine, transparent, inodorous and pleasant-tasting jelly . In microscopic structure the granules
See also:
present an ovoid form, marked with concentric lines very similar to potato-starch, but readily distinguished by having a " hilum " marking at the thick extremity of the granule, while in potato-starch the same appearance occura at the thin end (compare
See also:
figs . 3 and 4 below) . In addition to the West Indian supplies, arrowroot is found in the commerce of Brazil, the East Indies,
See also:
Australia, Cape Colony and
See also:
Natal . The name " arrowroot " is derived from the use by the Mexican Indians of the juice of the fresh root as an application to wounds produced by poisoned arrows .

See also:
Sir Hans Sloane refers to it in his Catalogue of
See also:
Jamaica Plants (1696), and it is said to have been introduced into England by William Houston about 1732 . It is grown as a
See also:
stove-plant in botanic gardens . The slender, much - branched stem is 5 or 6 ft. high, and bears numerous leaves with long, narrow sheaths and large spreading ovate blades, and a few short-stalked white flowers . Tous-
See also:
les-mois, or Tulema arrowroot, also from the West Indies, is obtained from several species of Canna, a genus allied to Maranta, and cultivated in the same manner . The granules of tous-les-mois are readily distinguishable by their very large
See also:
size (fig . 5) . East Indian arrowroot is obtained from the root-stocks of several species of the genus Curcuma (nat. ord . Zingiberaceae), chiefly C. angustifolia, a native of central India . Brazilian arrow-root is the starch of the
See also:
cassava plant, a species of Manihot (fig . 6), which when agglutinated on hot plates forms the tapioca of commerce . The cassava is cultivated in the East Indian
See also:
Archipelago as well as in South
See also:
America . Tacca, or Otaheite °eta .2D~p Starch Granules magnified .

Fig . 3 . Potato . Fig . 4 . Arrowroot . Fig . 5 . Tous-les- Fig . 6 . Manihot. mois . b50 arrowroot, is the produce of Tacca pinnatifida, the pia plant of the South

Sea Islands .

Portland arrowroot was formerly pre-pared on the Isle of Portland from the tubers of the
See also:
common
See also:
cuckoo-pint, Arum maculatum . Various other species of arum yield valuable food-starches in hot countries . Under the name of
See also:
British arrowroot the farina of potatoes is sometimes sold, and the French excel in the preparation of imitations of the more costly starches from this source . The chief use, however, of potato-farina as an edible starch is for adulterating other and more costly preparations . This falsification can readily be detected by microscopic examination, and the .accompanying drawings exhibit the appearance under the microscope of the
See also:
principal starches we have described . Although these starches agree in chemical composition, their value as articles of
See also:
diet varies considerably, owing to different degrees of digestibility and pleasantness of taste . Arrowroot contains about 82 % of starch, and about 1% of proteid and
See also:
mineral matter . Farina, or British arrowroot, at about one-twelfth the price, is just as useful and pleasant a food .

End of Article: ARROWROOT
[back]
ARRONDISSEMENT (from arrondir, to make round)
[next]
ARROWSMITH

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.