1955
DOI: 10.1016/s0065-2628(08)60125-1
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The Thermal Destruction of Vitamin B1 in Foods

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Cited by 80 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…1 and 2. In all cases the reduction of pH dramatically increased the retention of thiamin, in accordance with behavior observed in high-moisture model systems (Farrer, 1955;Mauri, 1984). For example, the retention of thiamin in processed pea and corn purees with pH adjusted to 5.6 increased by about 95% and 63%, respectively, as compared to samples with normal pH.…”
Section: Polyphenolssupporting
confidence: 84%
“…1 and 2. In all cases the reduction of pH dramatically increased the retention of thiamin, in accordance with behavior observed in high-moisture model systems (Farrer, 1955;Mauri, 1984). For example, the retention of thiamin in processed pea and corn purees with pH adjusted to 5.6 increased by about 95% and 63%, respectively, as compared to samples with normal pH.…”
Section: Polyphenolssupporting
confidence: 84%
“…Thiamin retained in the steamed and the canned moin-moin amounted to 91 and 54%, respectively, of the initial thiamin concentration in the unheated moin-moin puree. The small steaming loss is consistent with the findings of Farrer (1955). The substantial thiamin loss due to the heat of retorting also is consistent with losses reported for other foods similarly heated (Feliciotti and Esselen, 1957).…”
Section: Sensory Evaluationsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…As an overall trend for the air-drying process, the amount of vitamins B 1 +B 2 were slightly higher at the lowest temperature tested (an average of 166 % at 45°C against 138 % at 60°C). Vitamin B 1 is the most thermolabile among the B vitamins, so degradation due to thermal effect could be expected (Farrer 1955). Vitamin B 2 is more thermal stable; thus, its degradation due to thermal effect occurs in a lesser extent.…”
Section: Vitamins Content In the Dried Applementioning
confidence: 99%