Boutheina Gargouri, Rania Ben Hmida, Oya Koseoglu, Mohamed Bouaziz
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Physico-chemical analysis of virgin olive oils from fresh and fallen fruits for assessing the quality and shelf life: characterization by chemometrics
The current study was conducted on olive fruit from the Chemlali cultivar gathered during two successive crop seasons and divided into two groups: olive plucked off the tree (Fresh olive) (oil yields 23%) and olive obtained from the ground before harvesting time, corresponding to Fallen Olive Fruit (oil yields 30%). The purpose of this research was to determine the effect of olive category on the quality of virgin olive oil (VOO). Analytical indicators, such as free acidity, peroxide value, and UV absorbance at 232–270 nm, showed higher values in Fallen Olive Fruit Oil, while pigments, total phenols, and oxidative stability exhibited lower values compered to Fresh olive oils. Similarly, Fallen Olive Fruit Oil has a lower oleic acid concentration, while the sterol content of the two samples remained nearly consistent across the two crop seasons. Furthermore, the phenolic percentage emanated from Chemlali olive oil varies according to the type of olive fruit, with Fresh olive oil having the highest concentration.
期刊介绍:
The journal European Food Research and Technology publishes state-of-the-art research papers and review articles on fundamental and applied food research. The journal''s mission is the fast publication of high quality papers on front-line research, newest techniques and on developing trends in the following sections:
-chemistry and biochemistry-
technology and molecular biotechnology-
nutritional chemistry and toxicology-
analytical and sensory methodologies-
food physics.
Out of the scope of the journal are:
- contributions which are not of international interest or do not have a substantial impact on food sciences,
- submissions which comprise merely data collections, based on the use of routine analytical or bacteriological methods,
- contributions reporting biological or functional effects without profound chemical and/or physical structure characterization of the compound(s) under research.