Oleogels—Their Applicability and Methods of Characterization

Oleogels or, more precisely, non-triglyceride structured lipid phases have been researched excessively in the last decade. Yet, no comprehensive knowledge base has emerged, allowing technology elevation from the laboratory bench into the industrial food application. That is partly due to insufficien...

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Main Authors: Eckhard Flöter, Till Wettlaufer, Valentina Conty, Maria Scharfe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-03-01
Series:Molecules
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/26/6/1673
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spelling doaj-fa577e2896f04d9ea08e848aaa753a302021-03-18T00:02:26ZengMDPI AGMolecules1420-30492021-03-01261673167310.3390/molecules26061673Oleogels—Their Applicability and Methods of CharacterizationEckhard Flöter0Till Wettlaufer1Valentina Conty2Maria Scharfe3Department of Food Process Engineering, TU Berlin, 13353 Berlin, GermanyDepartment of Food Process Engineering, TU Berlin, 13353 Berlin, GermanyDepartment of Food Process Engineering, TU Berlin, 13353 Berlin, GermanyDepartment of Food Process Engineering, TU Berlin, 13353 Berlin, GermanyOleogels or, more precisely, non-triglyceride structured lipid phases have been researched excessively in the last decade. Yet, no comprehensive knowledge base has emerged, allowing technology elevation from the laboratory bench into the industrial food application. That is partly due to insufficient characterization of the structuring systems studied. Examining a single composition decided upon by arbitrary methods does not stimulate progress in the research and technology area. A framework that gives much better guidance to product applications can easily be derived. For example, the incremental structure contribution concept is advocated as a parameter to compare the potency of structuring systems. These can straightforwardly be determined by combining solubility data and structural measurements in the recommended manner. The current method to determine the oil-binding capacity suffers from reproducibility and relevance. A newly developed method is suggested to overcome these shortcomings. The recommended new characterization of oleogels should contribute to a more comprehensive knowledge base necessary for product innovations.https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/26/6/1673non-triacylglyceride structuringoil binding capacityincremental structure contributionoleogel
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eckhard Flöter
Till Wettlaufer
Valentina Conty
Maria Scharfe
spellingShingle Eckhard Flöter
Till Wettlaufer
Valentina Conty
Maria Scharfe
Oleogels—Their Applicability and Methods of Characterization
Molecules
non-triacylglyceride structuring
oil binding capacity
incremental structure contribution
oleogel
author_facet Eckhard Flöter
Till Wettlaufer
Valentina Conty
Maria Scharfe
author_sort Eckhard Flöter
title Oleogels—Their Applicability and Methods of Characterization
title_short Oleogels—Their Applicability and Methods of Characterization
title_full Oleogels—Their Applicability and Methods of Characterization
title_fullStr Oleogels—Their Applicability and Methods of Characterization
title_full_unstemmed Oleogels—Their Applicability and Methods of Characterization
title_sort oleogels—their applicability and methods of characterization
publisher MDPI AG
series Molecules
issn 1420-3049
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Oleogels or, more precisely, non-triglyceride structured lipid phases have been researched excessively in the last decade. Yet, no comprehensive knowledge base has emerged, allowing technology elevation from the laboratory bench into the industrial food application. That is partly due to insufficient characterization of the structuring systems studied. Examining a single composition decided upon by arbitrary methods does not stimulate progress in the research and technology area. A framework that gives much better guidance to product applications can easily be derived. For example, the incremental structure contribution concept is advocated as a parameter to compare the potency of structuring systems. These can straightforwardly be determined by combining solubility data and structural measurements in the recommended manner. The current method to determine the oil-binding capacity suffers from reproducibility and relevance. A newly developed method is suggested to overcome these shortcomings. The recommended new characterization of oleogels should contribute to a more comprehensive knowledge base necessary for product innovations.
topic non-triacylglyceride structuring
oil binding capacity
incremental structure contribution
oleogel
url https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/26/6/1673
work_keys_str_mv AT eckhardfloter oleogelstheirapplicabilityandmethodsofcharacterization
AT tillwettlaufer oleogelstheirapplicabilityandmethodsofcharacterization
AT valentinaconty oleogelstheirapplicabilityandmethodsofcharacterization
AT mariascharfe oleogelstheirapplicabilityandmethodsofcharacterization
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