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Effects of thermal oxidation on the constitution of butterfat,butterfat fractions and certain vegetable oils
Authors:D. B. Kupranycz  M. A. Amer  B. E. Baker
Affiliation:(1) Department of Food Science and Agricultural Chemistry, Macdonald College of McGill University, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, Canada;(2) Department of Food Science and Agricultural Chemistry, Macdonald College of McGill University, 21,111 Lakeshore Rd., Box 187, H9X 1C0 Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, Canada
Abstract:To evaluate the thermal oxidative behavior of butterfat in comparison to selected vegetable oils, samples of winter and summer butterfat, liquid and solid butterfat fractions, and selected vegetable oils were heated at 185 C in the presence of air (30 ml/min) for 8 and 16 hr. The resultant heated fats and oils, as well as the methyl esters of their fatty acids, were examined by gel permeation chromatography. The results indicated that butterfat is much more stable to thermal oxidation than canola, sunflower and soybean oils. This was evidenced by a substantially higher content of both dimeric and higher oligomeric triglycerides in the vegetable oils than in any of the butterfat samples after both 8 and 16 hr of heating. The corn oil also exhibited a high degree of stability to thermal oxidation after 8 hr of heating. The 16 hr corn oil data, however, was less certain due to the presence of a very viscous and dark colored material which could not be removed from the oxidation flask; this was believed to contain highly polymerized oil and was not observed with any of the other samples. There were some differences in the inter- and intramolecular polymerization of the butterfat fractions compared with each other and with whole butterfat. With the winter butterfat samples, after 8 hr of thermal oxidation, both the solid and liquid butterfat fractions exhibited more stability toward intermolecular polymerization than did the whole butterfat. After 16 hr of heating the ratio of trimeric and higher oligomeric triglycerides to dimeric triglycerides increased with increasing degree of unsaturation of the butterfat and with increased time of heating. Similar trends were observed with regard to the degree of intramolecular polymerization. Presented at the AOCS meeting in Philadelphia in May 1985.
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