straight    chains  called  amylose,    and short,
branched,   bushy   chains  called  amylopectin.
Plants  deposit starch  molecules   in
microscopic solid   granules.   The size,   shape,
amylose and amylopectin contents,   and
cooking qualities   of  the starch  granules    vary
from    species to  species.
Linear   Amylose     and     Bushy   Amylopectin
The  shapes  of  amylose     and     amylopectin
molecules   have    a   direct  effect  on  their   ability
to   thicken     a   sauce.  The     straight    amylose
chains   coil    up  into    long    helical     structures
when    dissolved   in  water,  but they    retain  their
basically   linear  shape.  Their   elongation  makes
it  very    likely  that    one chain   will    knock   into
another or  into    a   granule:    each    sweeps  through
a    relatively  large   volume  of  liquid.     By
contrast,    the     branched    shape   of  amylopectin
makes    for     a   compact     target  and     therefore   a
molecule     less    likely  to  collide     with    others;
and even    if  it  does    collide,    it’s    less    likely  to