4.7 Article

Influence of Deep Frying on the Unsaponifiable Fraction of Vegetable Edible Oils Enriched with Natural Antioxidants

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 59, Issue 13, Pages 7194-7202

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jf2015792

Keywords

olive oil; sunflower oil; fatty alcohols; sterols; triterpenic compounds; phenolic antioxidants; oil enrichment; deep frying; GC-MS

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (MICINN) [CTQ2009-07430]
  2. MICINN [RYC-2009-03921]

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The influence of deep frying, mimicked by 20 heating cycles at 180 degrees C (each cycle from ambient temperature to 180 degrees C maintained for 5 mm), on the unsaponifiable fraction of vegetable edible oils represented by three characteristic families of compounds (namely, phytosterols, aliphatic alcohols, and triterpenic compounds) has been studied. The target oils were extra virgin olive oil (with intrinsic content of phenolic antioxidants), refined sunflower oil enriched with antioxidant phenolic compounds isolated from olive pomace, refined sunflower oil enriched with an autoxidation inhibitor (dimethylpolysiloxane), and refined sunflower oil without enrichment. Monitoring of the target analytes as a function of both heating cycle and the presence of natural antioxidants was also evaluated by comparison of the profiles after each heating cycle. Identification and quantitation of the target compounds were performed by gas cromatography-mass spectrometry in single ion monitoring mode. Analysis of the heated oils revealed that the addition of natural antioxidants could be an excellent strategy to decrease degradation of lipidic components of the unsaponifiable fraction with the consequent improvement of stability.

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