7 Flashcards

1
Q

what is an emulsifier

A

(1) Emulsion: heterogenous system of at least one immiscible liquid dispersed in the form of small droplets in another liquid (margarine/butter: water in oil; mayonnaise/ice cream: oil in water; chocolate milk; solid particles in a liquid)
(2) Emulsifier: surface active (surface: air-liquid; interface: liquid-liquid or solid-liquid) agent which aids in the formation of an emulsion and increases the stability of an emulsion

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2
Q

water in oil example

A

butter

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3
Q

oil in water example

A

salad dressing

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4
Q

oil in water and air in water example

A

ice cream

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5
Q
function of emulsifiers
4
A

(1) to assist the formation and stabilization of emulsions by reducing the interfacial/surface tension at the oil-water/liquid-air interface
(2) to alter the functionality of other food components (e.g. staling resistance in bakery goods)
(3) Reduce stickiness in a food product (e.g. peanut butter)
(4) To modify the crystallization of lipids (e.g. inhibition of chocolate bloom)

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6
Q

what is the main emulsifier used in the food industry
made of what 3 compounds

is it considered a food additive

A

lecithin/phospholipids (ionic emulsifier(s); www.americanlecithin.com)

  • by-product of soybean oil extraction (soybeans: 1-3% phospholipid content  comprised of phosphatidyl choline, phosphatidyl ethanolamine and phosphatidyl inositiol)

pH changes the state—protonate negative charges to become neutral
-counter-ions

lecithin/phospholipids (ionic emulsifier)

- a value added product (co-product stream) from eggs (2-3% 	phospholipids), canola, corn and sunflower
- has GRAS status

- no ADI (GMP) 
- food additive designation in Canada—even though it’s 	naturally present in foods
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7
Q

mono- and diacylglycerols (non-ionic emulsifiers)—
produced by what 2 compounds reacting together
is it a food aditive

A

exist in nature, but when do chemically, changes it up a lot
- produced chemically via the reaction of glycerol with triacylglycerols (TAG) in the presence of a catalyst (sodium methoxide) or by enzymatic reaction of TAG with lipase

- GRAS status (used in foods since 1930) and no ADI 
- food additive designation in Canada  3. 3 billion dollars spend on emulsifiers in world each year  - mono is more hydrophilic than diacylglycerol - chain length of f.a.—longer it is, more hydrophobic
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8
Q

Sorbitan fatty acid esters (polysorbates, tweens)

how is it produced is it amphiphilic
is it ionic?

A
  • produced chemically by heating sorbitol in the presence of ethylene oxide + catalyst + either stearic or oleic acid
    • amphiphilic and non-ionic
    • approved for specific food use at specified levels (e.g. baked goods [< 0.5%], ice cream, coffee whiteners [0.0175%])
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9
Q

are synthetic emulsifiers toxic

A
  • animal studies (rats, mice, dogs): 7, 12, and 29 g/kg of bwt
     no cmta
    • animal studies: 1.5% (total diet), three generation studies
       no fertility or reproductive disorders
    • human studies: 26 g/day for three weeks  no observed acute or chronic effects
    • LD50 for polysorbates: 30g/kg bwt (single oral dose level)
    • ADI: 0.25-25 mg/kg bwt (JECFA)
  • emulsifiers and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)  Polysorbate 80 (Tween 80) and carboxymethylcelluose (CMC) , bulking/filler promoted colitis and IBS in mice—IBS increased recently (biochem markers show this is true), correlated with consumption of emulsifiers
    • levels used: 1.0% by wt in drinking water for 12-weeks (actual amount ingested was not reported); also ran the same experiments with 1.0%, 0.5% and 0.1% in rodent chow (actual amounts ingested were not reported)  authors report that these levels matched those used in the food industry  ?
    • genetic strain of mice used were, “highly sensitive to any change in gut microbiota” and “prone to metabolic syndrome”
  • in chow fed mice  inflammation was observed @1.0% with much lower inflammation observed @0.5% levels and results @0.1% were not significantly different from the control (rodent chow with no emulsifer added)
    • colitis incidence in drinking water control @12 weeks  ~50% of mice population
    • conclusion: “broad use of emulsifying agents might be contributing to an increase in societal incidence of metabolic syndrome and other chronic inflammatory diseases”
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10
Q

Biosurfactants

definition
(1) Glycolipid surfactants

risk

A

(1) Glycolipid surfactants

  • lipids covalently linked to
    carbohydrates (e.g. rhamnose)
    (Pseudomonas)

Risk: antimicrobial activity
-antimicrobial resistance develop

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11
Q

biosurfactants
lipopeptide surfactants
what is it?

A
  • lipids covalently linked to
    peptides (Pseudomonas,
    Bacillus and Lactobacillus)
  • surfactin: (Bacillus subtilis)
    Leu-Leu-Asp-Val-Leu-Leu-Glu
    (risk: antimicrobial activity)
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12
Q

Biosurfactants

(3) oligosaccharide/polysaccharide-lipd surfactants

where is it used?

A
  • adjuvant activity (increases the
    activity of certain pharmaceuticals;
    reduces dental plaque formation)

-used in oil extraction (tar sands)

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13
Q

The future
saponins
where is it extracted from

A
  • Q-Naturale®
  • isolated from the bark of the
    Quillaja saponaria Molina tree (Chile)
  • approved for use as a foaming agent in carbonated and non-carbonated beverages: Canada/USA/EU (2010) and has GRAS status (application for broader [eg. Ice cream] emulsifer use has been submitted by Ingredion™ [National Starch Co., Canada])
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