4.6 Article

A New Definition of the Term High-Phenolic Olive Oil Based on Large Scale Statistical Data of Greek Olive Oils Analyzed by qNMR

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26041115

Keywords

olive oil; phenols; NMR; health claim

Funding

  1. European Regional Development Fund through the INTERREG MEDITERRANEAN project ARISTOIL
  2. World Olive center for health

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A study conducted in Greece analyzed 5764 olive oil samples from over 30 varieties over an eleven-year period, with the aim of measuring the phenolic content using qNMR. The results showed significant variation in phenolic content among different olive oil cultivars, with an average total phenolic content of 483 mg/kg and a maximum recorded concentration of 4003 mg/kg. The study proposed defining "high-phenolic" and "exceptionally high-phenolic" olive oil based on phenolic content levels.
In the last few years, a new term, High-phenolic olive oil, has appeared in scientific literature and in the market. However, there is no available definition of that term regarding the concentration limits of the phenolic ingredients of olive oil. For this purpose, we performed a large-scale screening and statistical evaluation of 5764 olive oil samples from Greece coming from >30 varieties for an eleven-year period with precisely measured phenolic content by qNMR. Although there is a large variation among the different cultivars, the mean concentration of total phenolic content was 483 mg/kg. The maximum concentration recorded in Greece reached 4003 mg/kg. We also observed a statistically significant correlation of the phenolic content with the harvest period and we also identified varieties affording olive oils with higher phenolic content. In addition, we performed a study of phenolic content loss during usual storage and we found an average loss of 46% in 12 months. We propose that the term high-phenolic should be used for olive oils with phenolic content > 500 mg/kg that will be able to retain the health claim limit (250 mg/kg) for at least 12 months after bottling. The term exceptionally high phenolic olive oil should be used for olive oil with phenolic content > 1200 mg/kg (top 5%).

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