QUALITY DETERIORATION IN COMMERCIAL VIRGIN COCONUT OIL DUE TO PHOTOOXIDATION AND AUTOOXIDATION

The objective of this study was to investigate the keeping quality of commercial virgin coconut oil (VCO) and toidentify the probable cause of its quality deterioration. Fourteen brands of commercial VCO and a fresh prepared VCO were used. Sensory evaluation on odor and taste was conducted. Free fat...

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Main Authors: Ambar Rukmini, Sri Raharjo, Pudji Hastuti, Supriyadi Supriyadi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Gadjah Mada 2012-05-01
Series:Agritech
Online Access:https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/agritech/article/view/9635
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spelling doaj-74a10c4e5da54245933074f95dfd9e872020-11-25T00:05:05ZengUniversitas Gadjah MadaAgritech0216-04552527-38252012-05-01310410.22146/agritech.96357806QUALITY DETERIORATION IN COMMERCIAL VIRGIN COCONUT OIL DUE TO PHOTOOXIDATION AND AUTOOXIDATIONAmbar RukminiSri RaharjoPudji HastutiSupriyadi SupriyadiThe objective of this study was to investigate the keeping quality of commercial virgin coconut oil (VCO) and toidentify the probable cause of its quality deterioration. Fourteen brands of commercial VCO and a fresh prepared VCO were used. Sensory evaluation on odor and taste was conducted. Free fatty acid (FFA), moisture, peroxide value (PV), tocopherol, carotenoid, chlorophyll-a, total phenolics content, and fatty acid compounds of VCO were analyzed. In order to observe the effect of photooxidation on the keeping quality, a fresh prepared VCO was packed in a transparent glass bottle and exposed to fluorescent light at 4,000 lux at room temperature for 5 h. PV of the samples were measured at 1 h interval. The results indicated that 10 out of 14 commercial VCO had PV of 1.0 meq/kg or higher and objectionable odor and taste were clearly detected by panelists. The PV of fresh prepared VCO was 0.14 meq/kg oil and only within3 h of light exposure (4,000 lux) its PV reached 1.0 meq/kg oil. Naturally present antioxidants in the VCO were not effective for inhibiting photooxidation, while existing of 0.098 ppm chlorophyll-a effectively sensitized photooxidation reaction. This study confirmed that once the VCO undergoes brief photooxidation, subsequent protection using light barrier packaging material will not effective to inhibit quality deterioration during trading, display, or storage.https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/agritech/article/view/9635
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ambar Rukmini
Sri Raharjo
Pudji Hastuti
Supriyadi Supriyadi
spellingShingle Ambar Rukmini
Sri Raharjo
Pudji Hastuti
Supriyadi Supriyadi
QUALITY DETERIORATION IN COMMERCIAL VIRGIN COCONUT OIL DUE TO PHOTOOXIDATION AND AUTOOXIDATION
Agritech
author_facet Ambar Rukmini
Sri Raharjo
Pudji Hastuti
Supriyadi Supriyadi
author_sort Ambar Rukmini
title QUALITY DETERIORATION IN COMMERCIAL VIRGIN COCONUT OIL DUE TO PHOTOOXIDATION AND AUTOOXIDATION
title_short QUALITY DETERIORATION IN COMMERCIAL VIRGIN COCONUT OIL DUE TO PHOTOOXIDATION AND AUTOOXIDATION
title_full QUALITY DETERIORATION IN COMMERCIAL VIRGIN COCONUT OIL DUE TO PHOTOOXIDATION AND AUTOOXIDATION
title_fullStr QUALITY DETERIORATION IN COMMERCIAL VIRGIN COCONUT OIL DUE TO PHOTOOXIDATION AND AUTOOXIDATION
title_full_unstemmed QUALITY DETERIORATION IN COMMERCIAL VIRGIN COCONUT OIL DUE TO PHOTOOXIDATION AND AUTOOXIDATION
title_sort quality deterioration in commercial virgin coconut oil due to photooxidation and autooxidation
publisher Universitas Gadjah Mada
series Agritech
issn 0216-0455
2527-3825
publishDate 2012-05-01
description The objective of this study was to investigate the keeping quality of commercial virgin coconut oil (VCO) and toidentify the probable cause of its quality deterioration. Fourteen brands of commercial VCO and a fresh prepared VCO were used. Sensory evaluation on odor and taste was conducted. Free fatty acid (FFA), moisture, peroxide value (PV), tocopherol, carotenoid, chlorophyll-a, total phenolics content, and fatty acid compounds of VCO were analyzed. In order to observe the effect of photooxidation on the keeping quality, a fresh prepared VCO was packed in a transparent glass bottle and exposed to fluorescent light at 4,000 lux at room temperature for 5 h. PV of the samples were measured at 1 h interval. The results indicated that 10 out of 14 commercial VCO had PV of 1.0 meq/kg or higher and objectionable odor and taste were clearly detected by panelists. The PV of fresh prepared VCO was 0.14 meq/kg oil and only within3 h of light exposure (4,000 lux) its PV reached 1.0 meq/kg oil. Naturally present antioxidants in the VCO were not effective for inhibiting photooxidation, while existing of 0.098 ppm chlorophyll-a effectively sensitized photooxidation reaction. This study confirmed that once the VCO undergoes brief photooxidation, subsequent protection using light barrier packaging material will not effective to inhibit quality deterioration during trading, display, or storage.
url https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/agritech/article/view/9635
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