4.6 Review

A Review of the Effects of Olive Oil-Cooking on Phenolic Compounds

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27030661

Keywords

EVOO; vegetables; phenolic compounds; thermal treatment; processing techniques; bioaccessibility; bioavailability

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This review reanalyzes the fate, accessibility, and bioavailability of phenolic compounds in cooking oils and cooked vegetables. The findings suggest that the current evidence is mainly contradictory, and further research is needed to clarify the impact of cooking techniques on these compounds.
The fate of phenolic compounds in oil and food during cooking vary according to the type of cooking. From a nutritional point of view, reviews largely suggest a preference for using extra-virgin olive oil at a low temperature for a short time, except for frying and microwaving, for which there appears to be no significant advantages compared to olive oil. However, due to the poorly pertinent use of terminology, the different protocols adopted in studies aimed at the same objective, the different type and quality of oils used in experiments, and the different quality and quantity of PC present in the used oils and in the studied vegetables, the evidence available is mainly contradictory. This review tries to reanalyse the main experimental reports on the fate, accessibility and bioavailability of phenolic compounds in cooking oils and cooked vegetables, by considering different cooking techniques and types of oil and foods, and distinguishing experimental findings obtained using oil alone from those in combination with vegetables. The re-analysis indicates that incomplete and contradictory observations have been published in the last few years and suggests that further research is necessary to clarify the impact of cooking techniques on the phenolic compounds in oil and vegetables during cooking, especially when considering their nutritional properties.

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