Abstract
Effect of Frying and Reheating Processes on the Fatty Acids and Antioxidants of Commonly Used Cooking Oils in the Arabian Region: A Comparative Study
Noha Omer1, Suhair A. Atta1, Rasha Jame1, Fatimah A. Alotaibi1, Jozaa. N. Al –Tweher1, Hatem A. Al-Aoh1, Zahra E. Suliman2 and Syed Khalid Mustafa1*
DOI : http://dx.doi.org/10.13005/ojc/390513
Abstract:
Vegetable oils like extra virgin olive oil, Moringa oleifera oil, sunflower, and corn oils are regularly used for cooking purposes in the Arabian region. Additionally, the consumption of fried food is becoming increasingly popular in this region. The current study is to find out how temperature affects oils without using food of any kind. The fatty acid and antioxidant profiles of these four vegetable oils (extra virgin olive oil, Moringa oleifera oil, sunflower oil, and corn oil) have been investigated in terms of temperature during deep-frying and re-heating. In this process, an electric fryer is used for deep-frying and reheating oil without adding any kind of food. The collected vegetable oil samples were heated for six hours on five different time periods to a temperature of up to 175 ± 5 °C, and the fatty acid profiles were analysed before and after each cycle by using gas chromatography and were characterized by means of UV and FTIR techniques as well. The composition of oil fatty acids is more affected by re-heating than by deep-frying, as the results indicated. The antioxidant activity of the different oils was assessed using the diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) scan; the findings revealed that, whereas antioxidant activity dropped sharply in re-heated oils, it did so gradually for deep-frying samples.
Keywords:Antioxidant; Cooking Oils; Fatty Acid; Human’s Health; High Temperatures; Stability
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