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Emulsions Vegetable tests

Diehl, K.C., Hamann, D.D., and Whitfield, J.K. 1979. Textural failure in selected raw fruits and vegetables. J. Texture Studies 10 371-400. Fligner, K.L., Fligner, M.A., and Mangino, M.E. 1991. Accelerated tests for predicting long-term creaming stability of infant formula emulsion systems. Food Hydrocolloids 5 269-280. [Pg.293]

Vegetable oil (none) or antioxidants in vegetable oil were added as ingredients in the raw meat emulsions for bologna manufacture. The antioxidants tested were 500 ppm sodium erythorbate (eiythorbate), 200 ppm sodium nitrite (nitrite), and 0.075% rosemary extract (rosemary). The emulsions were cased, cooked, and irradiated at 3 kGy. Volatile compounds measured die next day, and expressol as square root of peak ar count. The numbers were means of four replicates. Adopted from ref (26). [Pg.216]

The antioxidant activities of tocopherols have been investigated in various test systems, including vegetable oils, animal fats, emulsions, PUFAs etc. It has been proposed that the relative antioxidant activity of different tocopherols depends on temperature, lipid composition, physical state (bulk phase, emulsion), and tocopherol concentration. On the basis of hydroperoxide... [Pg.158]

The antioxidant activities of rosemary extracts, carnosol and camosic acid were also significantly influenced by the oil substrates and the type of system tested, bulk oils versus oil-in-water emulsions, the methods used to measure oxidation and the concentration of test compounds. The rosemary extracts, carnosol and camosic acid effectively inhibited hydroperoxide formation in com oil, soybean oil, peanut oil and fish oil, when tested in bulk (Table 9.12). The rosemary extract and pure constituents were more active antioxidants in bulk corn, peanut and fish oils than in bulk soybean oil. This difference may be attributed to the relatively higher concentrations of tocopherols in soybean oil that are known to have a negative effect on the antioxidant activity of rosemary constituents. Test compounds also inhibited hexanal formation in bulk vegetable oils, and propanal and pentenal formation in bulk fish oils. In marked contrast, these test compounds were either inactive or promoted oxidation in the corresponding vegetable oil-in-water emulsions. In fish oil emulsions, however, the rosemary compounds inhibited conjugated diene and pentenal formation, but not propanal. [Pg.239]


See other pages where Emulsions Vegetable tests is mentioned: [Pg.316]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.427]    [Pg.1144]    [Pg.513]    [Pg.1256]    [Pg.378]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.34 , Pg.130 ]




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