Oxidation, stability and food quality

We are at the… ESPN 2017

IMG-20170510-WA0014We are at the 21st European Symposium on Poultry Nutrition (8-11 May 2017, Salou, Spain). We are presenting our research on Feed raw materials, on Quality Control and nutritional quality of animal fats, and on Bioactive compounds on poultry nutrition. Meet us!

Our new research article has been published!

Co-spray-drying of a heme iron ingredient to decrease its pro-oxidant effect in lipid-containing food

Mercedes Alemán, Ricard Bou, Javier Polo, Carmen Rodríguez, Alba Tres, Rafael Codony and Francesc Guardiola
has been published in the journal:

European Journal of Lipid Science and Technology

Read it!!!!! DOI: 10.1002/ejlt.201400377

This article describes the results from one of our studies within the project Optimization of the oxidative stability of foods enriched in iron, that we have conducted within our research area Oxidation, stability and food quality.

This study has been a collaboration between our research group and the company APC Europe S.A., and has been funded by the EVALXARTA program (Xarxa de Referència en Tecnologia dels Aliments de la Generalitat de Catalunya), and by a PhD grant awarded to Mercedes Alemán by the regional authorities of Navarra.

GA_M.AlemánAbstract:

Fortification of food products with non-heme or heme iron is a common strategy to overcome nutritional iron deficiency. Heme iron is highly bioavailable but it promotes oxidation, as do other iron forms. Palm oil is widely used in the formulation of bakery products and chocolate fillings. The work reported here aims to delay the onset of oxidation of a palm oil matrix fortified with heme iron, as a model for bakery products, through the use of ascorbyl palmitate (0 and 400 mg/kg) and the co-spray-drying of the heme iron with calcium caseinate in two ratios (heme iron concentrate:caseinate, 2:1 and 1:1, w/w). Primary (peroxide value and lipid hydroperoxide content) and secondary (p-anisidine value and hexanal content) oxidation were measured over one year of storage at room temperature in the dark. The combination of ascorbyl palmitate at 400 mg/kg and the co-spray-dried heme iron in a 1:1 ratio was the treatment that best protected iron fortified samples from oxidation during the storage time.

UBXaRTA

We are at…. AOCS Annual Meeting 2015!

 We are at the 106th AOCS Annual Meeting, 3-6 May 2015, in Orlando, Florida (USA)! On Wednesday morning, we at the Lipid Oxidation and Quality Session Francesc Guardiola will be presenting:

Strategies to Improve the Oxidative Stability of Bakery Products Fortified with Heme Iron

M. Alemán, R. Bou, A. Tres, R. Codony, and F. Guardiola

This presentation will cover the results of our last study of our research area Oxidation, Stability and Food quality.

Don’t miss it!

We are at…. Madrid Fusión 2015

madrid fusionLiBiFOOD towards synergy between science and cooking!

Today Carles Tejedor (Oilmotion, Spain) conducts the workshop “Temperaturas del Aceite” (Oil temperatures) in #MFM15 Madrid Fusión 2015 – XIII Cumbre Internacional de Gastronomía, in collaboration with LiBiFOOD and Pere Castells (Campus de l’Alimentació – Universitat de Barcelona).

Enjoy the oil !!!!

Oils or fats?

The term fat is a generic term used to describe any greasy substance that is not soluble in water. This includes a wide range of products, from edible oils, common in our kitchens, to lubricants for mechanical uses. From a nutritional point of view, this term must be used with care, since these two non-equivalent terms (oil, fat) are used to designate fatty substances in food and feed.

mantega fonentoliva parcialment solidThe term “fat” refers to the substances formed by 100% liposoluble materials (not water soluble materials) and that have a semi solid aspect at room temperature (20ºC), such as lard or cocoa butter. Instead, the term “oil” includes those materials which also are completely liposoluble, but are liquid at room temperature, such as olive oil or sunflower.

But it is clear that this concept is relative, since it depends on temperature. For instance, we all know that when we heat the lard in the pan, it melts and becomes liquid. In the same way,in winter in cold climates  olive oil completely or partially solidifies. This case of olive oil raises an interesting question: why olive oil is often partially solidified when cooled down? The explanation is that oils and fats are not homogeneous materials. Actually they are composed of more than 95% of what are called triglycerides (molecules that contain 3 fatty acids attached to a glycerol). But in an oil or fat there is a great variety of triglycerides, originated by the various combinations of the different fatty acids that are in the oil or fat. In a simplified way, we could say that olive oil has triglycerides containing 3 unsaturated fatty acids (such as oleic) but also triglycerides containing 1, 2 or even 3 saturated fatty acids (such as palmitic). The consequence is that the triglyceride with 3 oleic acids melts at lower temperature (or in other words, it is liquid at room temperature), while that with 3 palmitic acids melts at a higher temperature (in other words, it is semi solid at room temperature). In between there are many other combinations of fatty acids in triglycerides, each melting at a different temperature. This explains why at a certain temperature, an oil or fat can be partially liquid and partially solid. Thus, we could say that the liquid or solid aspect of an oil or fat depends on its composition in different triglycerides. This variable composition not only has an impact on the melting temperature, but also in its oxidability and nutritional value.

On the other hand, the minor fraction of oils and fats (between 1 and 5%) is usually named non-glyceridic or unsaponifiable. It contains nutritional compounds of interest, such as fat-soluble vitamins (A, D and E) and sterols (cholesterol in animal fats and oils, and various phytosterols in vegetable oils and fats). In virgin olive oil there also are some polyphenolic compounds that have shown antioxidant effects and preventive or modulating properties in atherosclerosis, diabetes and cancer among others. This has implied that the EU has authorized in its regulations (Regulation No 432/2012) a health claim for labeling or advertising of olive oils that contain polyphenols above a certain concentration (5 mg of hydroxytyrosol per 20 grams of oil).

By Rafael Codony, PhD

COMMISSION REGULATION (EU) No 432/2012 of 16 May 2012 establishing a list of permitted health claims made on foods, other than those referring to the reduction of disease risk and to children’s development and health. Official Journal of the European Union, L136/1.