Betalain extraction from Hylocereus polyrhizus for natural food coloring purposes.

Coloring preparations from Hylocereus polyrhizus have recently received attention because peel and/or aril of the fruit exhibit a high content of betacyanins. These pigments are of special interest due to their potential as a red food colorants with a high stability at neutral pH. To improve product...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Naderi, Nassim, Stintzing, F.C., Mohd Ghazali, Hasanah, Abd. Manap, Mohd. Yazid, Jazayeri, S.D.
Format: Article
Language:English
English
Published: Professional Association for Cactus Development 2010
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/24073/1/Betalain%20extraction%20from%20Hylocereus%20polyrhizus%20for%20natural%20food%20coloring%20purposes.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/24073/
http://www.jpacd.org/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.upm.eprints.24073
record_format eprints
spelling my.upm.eprints.240732015-12-16T07:32:23Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/24073/ Betalain extraction from Hylocereus polyrhizus for natural food coloring purposes. Naderi, Nassim Stintzing, F.C. Mohd Ghazali, Hasanah Abd. Manap, Mohd. Yazid Jazayeri, S.D. Coloring preparations from Hylocereus polyrhizus have recently received attention because peel and/or aril of the fruit exhibit a high content of betacyanins. These pigments are of special interest due to their potential as a red food colorants with a high stability at neutral pH. To improve production yield and to obtain a concentrated Hylocereus fruit extract, Pectinex Ultra SP–L in various dosages was applied to degrade the mucilage and make seed removal easier. Analytical methods were used to assess characteristic quality parameters of the treated samples against a control. Colour stability and overall betacyanin retention was assessed to monitor pigment retention. Moreover, individual betacyanin stability for each sample was monitored by comparing peak areas of the respective pigments. Betanin, phyllocactin, hylocerenin, and their respective C15 –isomers were identified as the major betacyanin components in treated samplesInterestingly, these isomers appeared to be indicative of enzymation, while the control showed rather little contents. In addition, betanin and isobetanin presented best stability in all treatments whereas phyllocactin degraded fastest as reflected in lower values for the phyllocactin isomerization index. Professional Association for Cactus Development 2010 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/24073/1/Betalain%20extraction%20from%20Hylocereus%20polyrhizus%20for%20natural%20food%20coloring%20purposes.pdf Naderi, Nassim and Stintzing, F.C. and Mohd Ghazali, Hasanah and Abd. Manap, Mohd. Yazid and Jazayeri, S.D. (2010) Betalain extraction from Hylocereus polyrhizus for natural food coloring purposes. Journal of Professional Association for Cactus Development, 12. pp. 143-154. ISSN 1938-6648 http://www.jpacd.org/ English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
English
description Coloring preparations from Hylocereus polyrhizus have recently received attention because peel and/or aril of the fruit exhibit a high content of betacyanins. These pigments are of special interest due to their potential as a red food colorants with a high stability at neutral pH. To improve production yield and to obtain a concentrated Hylocereus fruit extract, Pectinex Ultra SP–L in various dosages was applied to degrade the mucilage and make seed removal easier. Analytical methods were used to assess characteristic quality parameters of the treated samples against a control. Colour stability and overall betacyanin retention was assessed to monitor pigment retention. Moreover, individual betacyanin stability for each sample was monitored by comparing peak areas of the respective pigments. Betanin, phyllocactin, hylocerenin, and their respective C15 –isomers were identified as the major betacyanin components in treated samplesInterestingly, these isomers appeared to be indicative of enzymation, while the control showed rather little contents. In addition, betanin and isobetanin presented best stability in all treatments whereas phyllocactin degraded fastest as reflected in lower values for the phyllocactin isomerization index.
format Article
author Naderi, Nassim
Stintzing, F.C.
Mohd Ghazali, Hasanah
Abd. Manap, Mohd. Yazid
Jazayeri, S.D.
spellingShingle Naderi, Nassim
Stintzing, F.C.
Mohd Ghazali, Hasanah
Abd. Manap, Mohd. Yazid
Jazayeri, S.D.
Betalain extraction from Hylocereus polyrhizus for natural food coloring purposes.
author_facet Naderi, Nassim
Stintzing, F.C.
Mohd Ghazali, Hasanah
Abd. Manap, Mohd. Yazid
Jazayeri, S.D.
author_sort Naderi, Nassim
title Betalain extraction from Hylocereus polyrhizus for natural food coloring purposes.
title_short Betalain extraction from Hylocereus polyrhizus for natural food coloring purposes.
title_full Betalain extraction from Hylocereus polyrhizus for natural food coloring purposes.
title_fullStr Betalain extraction from Hylocereus polyrhizus for natural food coloring purposes.
title_full_unstemmed Betalain extraction from Hylocereus polyrhizus for natural food coloring purposes.
title_sort betalain extraction from hylocereus polyrhizus for natural food coloring purposes.
publisher Professional Association for Cactus Development
publishDate 2010
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/24073/1/Betalain%20extraction%20from%20Hylocereus%20polyrhizus%20for%20natural%20food%20coloring%20purposes.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/24073/
http://www.jpacd.org/
_version_ 1643828251530887168
score 13.18916