Subject: Wheat starch paste
I would very much appreciate hearing some opinions on instant wheat pastes. We have always used cooked wheat starch paste in our lab. We make it on Monday morning, store it under deionized water, change the water daily, and use it all week. On the whole this has worked well, but some days the consistency of the paste and its adhesive properties will be better than others, and after a couple of days it doesn't seem to dilute quite as smoothly as it did when it was first made. We recently purchased some instant wheat paste powder for some workshop kits, and I've been trying it out so that I can better instruct the workshop participants in its use. I have to admit that I like it very much. You can mix up a fresh batch every morning in about a minute, the texture is very nice, it is easily reversible in water, and the adhesion is stronger than any cooked paste I've used. I had never really considered using instant paste myself, but I'm wondering now, why not? I know there must be reasons - easier is seldom really better--but I don't know what the reasons are. One thing might be that what we bought is called wheat paste, not wheat starch paste. When I called the distributor of the paste that we bought, I was told that there was no such thing as instant wheat starch paste. However, I have since seen other instant pastes that claim to be pure pre-cooked wheat starch with no additives. I confess I'm confused, and would appreciate any information and opinions that anyone has on the subject. **** Moderator's comments: Your distributor misunderstood; it is the starch in wheat that provides paste's adhesivity, whether the paste be "instant" or not. Sandy Hempe Missouri State Archives 573-526-3970 *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:6 Distributed: Tuesday, July 16, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-6-012 ***Received on Wednesday, 10 July, 2002