2003
DOI: 10.1016/s0308-8146(02)00497-1
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Roasting of hazelnuts. Role of oil in colour development and hydroxymethylfurfural formation

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Cited by 89 publications
(66 citation statements)
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“…For non-defatted samples, prolonged roasting time (from 30 to 60 min) caused subsequent increases in HMF concentration (from 66.5 up to 144 mg/kg). The highest HMF concentration was observed in non--defatted hazelnuts with saccharose (372 mg/kg) in contrast to defatted hazelnut sample with saccharose (33.5 mg/ kg) [Fallico et al, 2003].…”
Section: Fruit and Vegetable Productsmentioning
confidence: 81%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…For non-defatted samples, prolonged roasting time (from 30 to 60 min) caused subsequent increases in HMF concentration (from 66.5 up to 144 mg/kg). The highest HMF concentration was observed in non--defatted hazelnuts with saccharose (372 mg/kg) in contrast to defatted hazelnut sample with saccharose (33.5 mg/ kg) [Fallico et al, 2003].…”
Section: Fruit and Vegetable Productsmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…The influence of low pH was also important but in real samples it could play a less important role (except heat processing where acids concentrations increases) [Muratore et al, 2006]. Fallico et al [2003] investigated the influence of oil concentration on HMF formation as well as on colour changes during roasting of hazelnuts. For this purpose hazelnut samples were defatted, ground, and subsequently roasted with varying amounts of hazelnut oil or oil containing hexanal and/or saccharose.…”
Section: Fruit and Vegetable Productsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nuts in particular are increasing in importance as food crops, with total world tree nut production for 2014-2015 at~3.5 million metric tons (kernels) [4]. Edible nuts in the form of raw or roasted kernels [5,6] are increasingly recommended for inclusion in healthy diets due to evidence of beneficial effects on blood cholesterol, coronary heart disease, diabetes, sudden death, inflammation, thrombosis and vascular reactivity [7][8][9][10]. More than 80% of the world trade in tree nuts is comprised of just four species, walnuts, hazelnuts, pistachios, and almonds [4].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…HMF has been widely used for this purpose (Delgado-Andrade et al 2007;Cioroi 2008;Rufián-Henares et al 2008;Morales et al 2009;Mesías-García et al 2010). On the other hand, HMF present in foodstuffs seems to be studied extensively also as a food contaminant with potential harmful properties (Lee et al 1995;Hiramoto et al 1996;Albala-Hurtado et al 1998;Hidalgo & Pompei 2000;Fallico et al 2003;Gökmen et al 2008;Husoy et al 2008).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%