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Thursday Lecture –Vegetable Oils and Waxes. Reading: Textbook, Chapter 9. A Plethora of Peppers “Black Pepper” – Piper nigrum (Asia) “Red Pepper” – Capsicum spp. (Mexico/South America) “Melegueta Pepper” – Aframomum (Africa) “Brazilian (or Pink) Pepper” – Schinus
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Thursday Lecture –Vegetable Oils and Waxes Reading: Textbook, Chapter 9
A Plethora of Peppers “Black Pepper” – Piper nigrum (Asia) “Red Pepper” – Capsicum spp. (Mexico/South America) “Melegueta Pepper” – Aframomum (Africa) “Brazilian (or Pink) Pepper” – Schinus Drupe of member of Anacardiaceae – some people exhibit allergic reaction
Quiz • Two different plants both give us a spice called “pepper” – Chili pepper (Capsicum) and Black pepper (Piper) – which is native to the Old World and which to the New World? • Name a major vegetable oil crop. Where is it originally native?
Vegetable Oils Figure 9.3, p. 221 Plant oils – mostly acylglycerides Glycerol – 3-carbon “backbone”
Vegetable Oils Figure 9.3, p. 221 Plant oils – mostly acylglycerides Glycerol – 3-carbon “backbone” Acyl groups – mostly fatty acids = chain of carbon atoms
Triacylglyceride structure Figure 9.3, p. 221
Vegetable Oils Figure 9.3, p. 221 Plant oils – mostly acylglycerides • Glycerol – 3-carbon “backbone” • Acyl groups – mostly fatty acids = chain of carbon atoms • Properties of acyl groups: • Length – longer = higher melting point
Vegetable Oils Figure 9.3, p. 221 Plant oils – mostly acylglycerides • Glycerol – 3-carbon “backbone” • Acyl groups – mostly fatty acids = chain of carbon atoms • Properties of acyl groups: • Length – longer = higher melting point • Unsaturation – the presence of double-bonds between carbons
Vegetable Oils Figure 9.3, p. 221 Plant oils – mostly acylglycerides • Glycerol – 3-carbon “backbone” • Acyl groups – mostly fatty acids = chain of carbon atoms • Properties of acyl groups: • Length – longer = higher melting point • Unsaturation – the presence of double-bonds between carbons • - monounsaturated = has 1 double bond
Vegetable Oils Figure 9.3, p. 221 Plant oils – mostly acylglycerides • Glycerol – 3-carbon “backbone” • Acyl groups – mostly fatty acids = chain of carbon atoms • Properties of acyl groups: • Length – longer = higher melting point • Unsaturation – the presence of double-bonds between carbons • - monounsaturated = has 1 double bond • - polyunsaturated = has 2 or more double bonds
Vegetable Oils Figure 9.3, p. 221 Plant oils – mostly acylglycerides • Glycerol – 3-carbon “backbone” • Acyl groups – mostly fatty acids = chain of carbon atoms • Properties of acyl groups: • Length – longer = higher melting point • Unsaturation – the presence of double-bonds between carbons • - monounsaturated = has 1 double bond • - polyunsaturated = has 2 or more double bonds • Double bonds generally lower melting point of compound
Triacylglyceride structure Figure 9.3, p. 221
Vegetable Oils – The Plant View Why do plants produce oils?
Vegetable Oils – The Plant View Why do plants produce oils? Answer: high energy content (caloric value) compact way to store energy
Vegetable Oils – The Plant View Why do plants produce oils? Answer: high energy content (caloric value) compact way to store energy Where do plants produce and store oils?
Vegetable Oils – The Plant View Why do plants produce oils? Answer: high energy content (caloric value) compact way to store energy Where do plants produce and store oils? Answer: seeds, particularly endosperm or cotyledon(s)
Vegetable Oils – The Human View Why do people consume vegetable oils (and other fats)? Box 9.1, p. 222
Vegetable Oils – The Human View Why do people consume vegetable oils (and other fats)? Answer: high energy content – we retain a craving for fats that was an advantage for our ancestors at a time when it was difficult to obtain fats Box 9.1, p. 222
Vegetable Oils – The Human View • Why do people consume vegetable oils (and other fats)? • Answer: high energy content – we retain a craving for fats that was an advantage for our ancestors at a time when it was difficult to obtain fats • What has changed? • widespread availability of fats/oils Box 9.1, p. 222
Vegetable Oils – The Human View • Why do people consume vegetable oils (and other fats)? • Answer: high energy content – we retain a craving for fats that was an advantage for our ancestors at a time when it was difficult to obtain fats • What has changed? • widespread availability of fats/oils • increase in human lifespan • Revealing health issues in high consumption of fats Box 9.1, p. 222
Acylglycerides – Health Issues – Consumption Increasing World Consumption Projected to be up 16% - 1998-2001 Figure 9.2, p. 220
Acylglycerides – Health Issues – Consumption Increasing World Consumption Projected to be up 12% - 2006-2011 Figure 9.2, p. 220
Acylglycerides – Health Issues – 25% of deaths in U.S. due to heart disease (2007) - #1 cause Box 9.1, p. 222
Acylglycerides – Health Issues – 25% of deaths in U.S. due to heart disease (2007) - #1 cause – Correlation between blood cholesterol & heart disease Box 9.1, p. 222
Acylglycerides – Health Issues – 25% of deaths in U.S. due to heart disease (2007) - #1 cause – Correlation between blood cholesterol & heart disease – Plants do not produce cholesterol Box 9.1, p. 222
Acylglycerides – Health Issues – 25% of deaths in U.S. due to heart disease (2007) - #1 cause – Correlation between blood cholesterol & heart disease – Plants do not produce cholesterol – Correlation – saturated dietary fats arterial plaque formation Box 9.1, p. 222
Acylglycerides – Health Issues – 25% of deaths in U.S. due to heart disease (2007) - #1 cause – Correlation between blood cholesterol & heart disease – Plants do not produce cholesterol – Correlation – saturated dietary fats arterial plaque formation Conclusion: exchange saturated for unsaturated fats in foods Box 9.1, p. 222
Acylglycerides – Health Issues – 25% of deaths in U.S. due to heart disease (2007) - #1 cause – Correlation between blood cholesterol & heart disease – Plants do not produce cholesterol – Correlation – saturated dietary fats arterial plaque formation Conclusion: exchange saturated for unsaturated fats in foods Problem: polyunsaturated fats linked to production of free radicals, which are carcinogenic Recommendation: mono-unsaturated fats appear best for health, based on currently available information Box 9.1, p. 222
Acylglycerides – Health Issues – 25% of deaths in U.S. due to heart disease (2007) - #1 cause – Correlation between blood cholesterol & heart disease – Plants do not produce cholesterol – Correlation – saturated dietary fats arterial plaque formation Conclusion: exchange saturated for unsaturated fats in foods Problem: polyunsaturated fats linked to production of free radicals, which are carcinogenic Recommendation: mono-unsaturated fats appear best for health, based on currently available information Problem: saturated fats “taste” better Box 9.1, p. 222
Trans Fats Saturated fats (animal fats, tropical vegetable fats) link to heart disease
Trans Fats Saturated fats (animal fats, tropical vegetable fats) link to heart disease Polyunsaturated fats vegetable oils, liquid at room temp.
Trans Fats Saturated fats (animal fats, tropical vegetable fats) link to heart disease Polyunsaturated fats vegetable oils, liquid at room temp. Hydrogenation – bubble hydrogen gas through vegetable oil, increases the saturation
Trans Fats Saturated fats (animal fats, tropical vegetable fats) link to heart disease Polyunsaturated fats vegetable oils, liquid at room temp. Hydrogenation – bubble hydrogen gas through vegetable oil, increases the saturation Completely saturated hard, like wax – not useful
Trans Fats Saturated fats (animal fats, tropical vegetable fats) link to heart disease Polyunsaturated fats vegetable oils, liquid at room temp. Hydrogenation – bubble hydrogen gas through vegetable oil, increases the saturation Completely saturated hard, like wax – not useful Partial saturation creamy consistency, useful for spreads also more chemically stable, longer shelf life
Trans Fats Saturated fats (animal fats, tropical vegetable fats) link to heart disease Polyunsaturated fats vegetable oils, liquid at room temp. Hydrogenation – bubble hydrogen gas through vegetable oil, increases the saturation Completely saturated hard, like wax – not useful Partial saturation creamy consistency, useful for spreads also more chemically stable, longer shelf life Problem – creates trans type of bonds – health problems
Omega 3, Omega 6 fats “Omega n” – refers to position of double bond relative to methyl end of fatty acid Required in human diet – omega 3, omega 6 types Associated with health benefits
Extraction of Vegetable Oils Figure 9.6, 9.7, p. 227 • Basic Approaches • Mechanical Extraction • - cold pressing means no heat applied • - hot pressing means external heart is applied • Note: screw press now widely used – allows continuous processing and separation of residual “cake”
Extraction of Vegetable Oils Figure 9.6, 9.7, p. 227 • Basic Approaches • Mechanical Extraction • - cold pressing means no heat applied • - hot pressing means external heart is applied • Note: screw press now widely used – allows continuous processing and separation of residual “cake” • Solvent Extraction • - organic solvent (e.g. hexane) • Notes: more efficient (less oil left behind) but requires processing because solvent must be removed
Processing of Vegetable Oils Figure 9.8, p. 229 Refining: use alkali to remove free fatty acids Degumming: extraction with water to remove mucilaginous material Bleaching: removal of pigments that produce color Deodorizing: removal of aromatic compounds through steam heating Winterizing: removal of particles by precipation at low temperature + filtering Hydrogenation: increasing the saturation of fatty acids (use hydrogen gas + catalyst) raise melting point
Common Sources of Vegetable Oils Table 9.4, p. 230-1 • Polyunsaturated • linseed oil (Linum usitatissimum - seeds) • tung oil (Aleurites fordii – seeds) • Unsaturated • Safflower (Carthamus – 1-seeded fruits) • soybean (Glycine max – seeds) • sunflower (Helianthus annuus – 1-seeded fruits) • corn oil (Zea mays – germ) • sesame oil (Sesamum indicum – seeds) • cottonseed oil (Gossypium – seeds) • canola oil (Brassica – seeds) • Moderately saturated • peanut oil (Arachis hypogaea – seeds) • olive oil (Olea europea – fruit pulp)
2005 2007
Traditional Vegetable Oil Plants Sesame Oil Linseed Oil - Flax
Traditional Oil Crop - Olive Cold Pressing of pulp after seeds removed “extra-virgin” – first press, low oleic acid level – not processed further
Traditional Oil Crop - Olive Cold Pressing of pulp after seeds removed “extra-virgin” – first press, low oleic acid level – not processed further “virgin” – first press, higher acid level – not processed further
Traditional Oil Crop - Olive Cold Pressing of pulp after seeds removed “extra-virgin” – first press, low oleic acid level – not processed further “virgin” – first press, higher acid level – not processed further “refined” – refining methods used odor/flavor altered “pure” – mixture of refined and virgin oils
Figure 9.21, p. 240 Major Oil Crops - Palm Palm plantation - Thailand Vegetable fat – solid at room temp
Major Oil Crops - Sunflower Figure 9.12, p. 234
Major Oil Crops - Canola Brassica napus – “rapeseed” rape Canada: Canadian oil = Canola
Vegetable Oils and Soaps Figure 9.5, p. 223 Hydrolysis of acylglyceride fatty acids + glycerol Triacylglyceride + alkali (e.g. NaOH – lye) sodium salt of fatty acid + glycerol + water Soap molecules connect oils with water