Food Engineering / Gıda Mühendisliği
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/12
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Article Citation - WoS: 27Citation - Scopus: 29Differentiation of Wines With the Use of Combined Data of Uv-Visible Spectra and Color Characteristics(Academic Press Inc., 2016) Şen, İlknur; Tokatlı, FigenUV-visible spectra and color parameters of monovarietal wines with orthogonal partial least square-discriminant analysis (OPLS-DA) were shown to be practical and rapid methods for classification purposes. Red and white wines from the 2006-2009 vintages were characterized in terms of color, anthocyanin content and UV-visible spectra. Syrah and Cabernet Sauvignon wines had high color density and intensity. Kalecik Karasi wines had the highest CIELab parameters and the lowest color density. Boğazkere and Öküzgözü wines showed similarities with respect to their high red color parameters and were distinct from other wines. Merlot, Syrah and Öküzgözü wines had the highest total anthocyanin content (61.9-55. mg/L as median values). White wines made from Chardonnay, Muscat and Emir grapes were found to have different color characteristics. The vintage-based discrimination of red wines was mostly apparent in total anthocyanin contents. Different UV wavelength regions were found to be effective in classification with respect to variety and vintage. Correct classification rates in the validation set were 100% and 75%, for varietal and vintage classifications, respectively. This study demonstrated the potential of combination of UV-visible spectra and color characteristics to be used in the authentication of wines.Article Citation - WoS: 27Citation - Scopus: 30Combination of Visible and Mid-Infrared Spectra for the Prediction of Chemical Parameters of Wines(Elsevier Ltd., 2016) Şen, İlknur; Öztürk, Burcu; Tokatlı, Figen; Özen, BanuRapid and environmentally friendly methods for the prediction of chemical compositions have been an interest in the wine industry. The objective of the study was to show the potentials of combined use of visible and mid-infrared (MIR) spectroscopies to improve the prediction of various chemical compounds of wine as opposed to using mid-infrared range only. Wine samples of twelve grape varieties from two harvest years were analyzed. The chemical composition of wine samples was related to MIR and visible spectra using orthogonal partial least square (OPLS) regression technique. The prediction abilities were tested with crossvalidation and independent validation sets. The coefficient of determination of validation (R2 val) for anthocyanin compounds of red wines were between 0.76 and 0.90, and that for total phenol content was 0.90. Range of R2 val for glycerol, glycerol/ethanol ratio, malic acid, o-coumaric acid and °Brix were between 0.77 and 0.96. The spectral ranges that played significant roles in the predictions were also determined. The validations with independent data sets showed that the combination of visible and MIR ranges with multivariate methods improved the prediction of anthocyanin compounds and total phenols; produced comparable results for the rest of the parameters as MIR. This is the first study in the literature that shows the practical use of visible spectra along MIR. The combined use of these spectral ranges with multivariate models can be applied for the rapid, on-line determination of quality parameters and chemical profiles of wines.Article Citation - WoS: 118Citation - Scopus: 127Investigating the Effects of Food Matrix and Food Components on Bioaccessibility of Pomegranate (punica Granatum) Phenolics and Anthocyanins Using an In-Vitro Gastrointestinal Digestion Model(Elsevier Ltd., 2014) Şengül, Hafizenur; Sürek, Ece; Nilüfer Erdil, DilaraEffects of food matrix and individual food components on potential bioaccessibility of pomegranate were investigated by means of simulating in vitro gastrointestinal (GI) digestion. The foodstuffs (sunflower oil, skim milk, cooked lean meat, bread, skim yogurt, probiotic yogurt, apple, lemon, honey, soy milk, cream, and soybean) and the food components (gluten, casein, isolated meat protein, lactose, fructose, galactose, glucose, salt, ascorbic acid, starch, cooked starch, tocopherol, linoleic acid, cellulose, citric acid and pectin) were codigested with pomegranate in model systems to better understand matrix effects. Total phenolic content (TPC) and total anthocyanin content (TAC) were determined by spectrophotometric methods and major phenolics/anthocyanins were analyzed by RP-HPLC/PDA detection both before and after in vitro GI digestion at post gastric (PG), dialyzable (IN) and non-dialyzable (OUT) fractions. Phenolics of pomegranate were found to be stable during gastric conditions (115%), with 25% loss in pancreatic digestion, available (14%) in IN. Although preserved (89%) in PG, anthocyanins were lost in pancreatic digestion (38%), but still available (12%) in IN. Milk, bread, yogurt, probiotic yogurt, lactose, starch, cellulose, salt, citric acid or tocopherol codigestion with pomegranate decreased TPC for all fractions. Proteins affected losses in PG and OUT fractions. Carbohydrates such as starch, lactose, glucose and pectin appeared to affect the loss of phenolics and exerted 2-fold decreases in serum fraction (IN). For TAC, only meat, soymilk or cream codigestion with pomegranate resulted in IN losses. Proteins did not significantly affect TAC in IN, but were inhibitory in PG. However, carbohydrates and fatty acids significantly increased TAC in IN. Generally cyanidins were found to be more stable in food matrices and pancreatic conditions than other anthocyanins.Article Citation - WoS: 30Citation - Scopus: 42Degradation of Various Fruit Juice Anthocyanins by Hydrogen Peroxide(Elsevier Ltd., 2005) Özkan, Mehmet; Yemenicioğlu, Ahmet; Cemeroglu, BekirDegradation kinetics of anthocyanins was studied in sour cherry nectar, pomegranate and strawberry juices at high hydrogen peroxide (H2O 2) concentrations (9.31-27.92 mmol l-1) at 10-30°C and in only sour cherry nectar at low H2O2 concentrations (0.23-2.33 mmol l-1) at 20°C. Degradation of anthocyanins followed the first-order reaction kinetics. Sour cherry anthocyanins were the most resistant to H2O2, followed by pomegranate and strawberry anthocyanins. Degradation of anthocyanins was also studied in sour cherry nectar and pomegranate juice in the presence of ascorbic acid at 60 and 80 mg l-1 concentrations at 20°C. At 80 mg level, ascorbic acid significantly accelerated the degradation of anthocyanins in sour cherry nectar at 4.65, 6.98 and 9.31 mmol l-1 H2O2 concentrations. In contrast, ascorbic acid at both 60 and 80 mg levels protected the anthocyanins from degradation by H2O2 in pomegranate juice.Article Citation - WoS: 38Citation - Scopus: 43Degradation Kinetics of Anthocyanins From Sour Cherry, Pomegranate, and Strawberry Juices by Hydrogen Peroxide(John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2002) Özkan, Mehmet; Yemenicioğlu, Ahmet; Asefi, N.; Cemeroglu, BekirDegradations were studied at different hydrogen peroxide (H2O2] concentrations (9.31 to 27.92 mmol. L-1] over a range of 10 ° to 30 °C. Degradation of anthocyanins by H2O2 was described by first-order function. Comparison of t1/2 values revealed that sour cherry anthocyanins were the most resistant to H2O2, followed by pomegranate and strawberry anthocyanins. Thus, the removal of residual H2O2 from the juice contact surfaces of aseptically packaged strawberry juices should be controlled more carefully to prevent anthocyanin degradation. Respective Ea values were between 9.4 to 11.1, 9.5 to 11.4, and 11.4 to 12.2 kcal.mol-1; and Q10 values between 1.59 to 2.22, 1.62 to 2.05, and 1.76 to 2.36 for strawberry, sour cherry, and pomegranate anthocyanins.
