4.7 Article

Ingredient-Dependent Extent of Lipid Oxidation in Margarine

期刊

ANTIOXIDANTS
卷 10, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox10010105

关键词

margarine; lipid oxidation; W; O emulsions; food additives

资金

  1. Senna Nahrungsmittel GmbH Co KG
  2. Austrian Federal Ministry for Digital and Economic Affairs
  3. National Foundation for Research, Technology and Development
  4. Christian Doppler Research Association (JRZ_EHRNHO)
  5. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [801936]
  6. European Research Council (ERC) [801936] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that ingredients like citric acid, rosemary, and green tea extract have a positive impact on the oxidative stability of margarine, while monoglycerides and alpha-tocopheryl acetate can promote lipid oxidation. Green tea extract exhibits the most prominent antioxidant effect on margarine.
This study reports the impact of margarine-representative ingredients on its oxidative stability and green tea extract as a promising antioxidant in margarine. Oil-in-water emulsions received much attention regarding factors that influence their oxidative stability, however, water-in-oil emulsions have only been scarcely investigated. Margarine, a widely consumed water-in-oil emulsion, consists of 80-90% fat and is thermally treated when used for baking. As different types of margarine contain varying additives, their impact on the oxidative stability of margarine during processing is of pressing importance. Thus, the influence of different ingredients, such as emulsifiers, antioxidants, citric acid, beta-carotene and NaCl on the oxidative stability of margarine, heated at 80 degrees C for 1 h to accelerate lipid oxidation, was analyzed by the peroxide value and oxidation induction time. We found that monoglycerides influenced lipid oxidation depending on their fatty acyl chain. alpha-Tocopheryl acetate promoted lipid oxidation, while rosemary and green tea extract led to the opposite. Whereas green tea extract alone showed the most prominent antioxidant effect, combinations of green tea extract with citric acid, beta-carotene or NaCl increased lipid oxidation in margarine. Complementary, NMR data suggested that polyphenols in green tea extracts might decrease lipid mobility at the surface of the water droplets, which might lead to chelating of transition metals at the interface and decreasing lipid oxidation.

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