Effect of thermal treatment on the biochemical composition of tropical honey samples

Honey is usually subjected to filtration and heating for bottling before commercialization. However, there is no standard procedure available for thermal treatment on honey. Honey is thermally heated at various temperature and duration based on individual experience to prolong the shelf life of hone...

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Main Authors: Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji, Chua, Lee Suan
Format: Article
Published: IFRJ, Faculty of Food Science & Technology, UPM 2014
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/59712/
http://ifrj.upm.edu.my/21%20(02)%202014/53%20IFRJ%2021%20(02)%202014%20Chua%20542.pdf
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spelling my.utm.597122022-04-26T01:21:48Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/59712/ Effect of thermal treatment on the biochemical composition of tropical honey samples Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji Chua, Lee Suan Q Science (General) Honey is usually subjected to filtration and heating for bottling before commercialization. However, there is no standard procedure available for thermal treatment on honey. Honey is thermally heated at various temperature and duration based on individual experience to prolong the shelf life of honey in the market. The heating methods might decrease the biochemical components such as nutrients, enzymatic activities and vitamins to certain extent. In addition to water reduction, thermal treatment on sugar rich honey usually accompanied by the formation of 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF). In the present study, the biochemical components in three commonly consumed honey in Malaysia, namely tualang, gelam and acacia honey were investigated before and after thermal treatment at 90oC for 30 min. The short period of heating time was found to degrade nutrients, enzymatic activities and water soluble vitamins in honey. The degradation of protein and enzyme via proteolytic digestion had attributed to the increase of free amino acids in honey. Based on the multivariate analysis, the most thermally affected biochemical components are crude fat, panthotenic acid (Vitamin B5) and diastase activity which explain for 86.4% of the total variance. The kinetic studies on the HMF formation revealed that the honey samples followed zero order kinetic model for the first 60 min of heating at 90oC. The findings indicate that the temperature and duration of heating during honey processing is essential to be investigated according to the honey origin. The initial biochemical composition of honey would affect the kinetic profile of HMF formation. IFRJ, Faculty of Food Science & Technology, UPM 2014 Article PeerReviewed Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji and Chua, Lee Suan (2014) Effect of thermal treatment on the biochemical composition of tropical honey samples. International Food Research Journal, 21 (2). pp. 773-778. ISSN 1985-4668 http://ifrj.upm.edu.my/21%20(02)%202014/53%20IFRJ%2021%20(02)%202014%20Chua%20542.pdf
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic Q Science (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji
Chua, Lee Suan
Effect of thermal treatment on the biochemical composition of tropical honey samples
description Honey is usually subjected to filtration and heating for bottling before commercialization. However, there is no standard procedure available for thermal treatment on honey. Honey is thermally heated at various temperature and duration based on individual experience to prolong the shelf life of honey in the market. The heating methods might decrease the biochemical components such as nutrients, enzymatic activities and vitamins to certain extent. In addition to water reduction, thermal treatment on sugar rich honey usually accompanied by the formation of 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF). In the present study, the biochemical components in three commonly consumed honey in Malaysia, namely tualang, gelam and acacia honey were investigated before and after thermal treatment at 90oC for 30 min. The short period of heating time was found to degrade nutrients, enzymatic activities and water soluble vitamins in honey. The degradation of protein and enzyme via proteolytic digestion had attributed to the increase of free amino acids in honey. Based on the multivariate analysis, the most thermally affected biochemical components are crude fat, panthotenic acid (Vitamin B5) and diastase activity which explain for 86.4% of the total variance. The kinetic studies on the HMF formation revealed that the honey samples followed zero order kinetic model for the first 60 min of heating at 90oC. The findings indicate that the temperature and duration of heating during honey processing is essential to be investigated according to the honey origin. The initial biochemical composition of honey would affect the kinetic profile of HMF formation.
format Article
author Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji
Chua, Lee Suan
author_facet Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji
Chua, Lee Suan
author_sort Sarmidi, Mohamad Roji
title Effect of thermal treatment on the biochemical composition of tropical honey samples
title_short Effect of thermal treatment on the biochemical composition of tropical honey samples
title_full Effect of thermal treatment on the biochemical composition of tropical honey samples
title_fullStr Effect of thermal treatment on the biochemical composition of tropical honey samples
title_full_unstemmed Effect of thermal treatment on the biochemical composition of tropical honey samples
title_sort effect of thermal treatment on the biochemical composition of tropical honey samples
publisher IFRJ, Faculty of Food Science & Technology, UPM
publishDate 2014
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/59712/
http://ifrj.upm.edu.my/21%20(02)%202014/53%20IFRJ%2021%20(02)%202014%20Chua%20542.pdf
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score 13.149126