Article in Journal

Structuring vegetable oils through enzymatic glycerolysis for water-in-oil emulsions

E. Savchina, A. L. Grosso, P. Massoner, K. Morozova, G. Ferrentino, M. M. Scampicchio

Food Chemistry, 2024, 443, 138596

Licence: CC BY 4.0
OPEN ACCESS

June 14, 2024


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Enzymatic glycerolysis is a biotechnological process for structuring vegetable oils. This study investigates the kinetics of glycerolysis of peanut oil and explores the potential of the resulting structured oil to enhance the physical stability of water-in-oil emulsions. Using a 1:1 glycerol-to-oil molar ratio and 4 % lipase B from Candida antarctica as a catalyst, the reaction was conducted at 65 °C with stirring at 400 rpm. Acylglyceride fractions changes were quantified through NMR and DSC. Fat crystal formation was observed using scanning electron microscopy. The results revealed a first-order decay pattern, converting triglycerides into monoacylglycerides and diacylglycerides in less than 16 h. Subsequently, water-in-oil emulsions prepared with glycerolized oil showed augmented stability through multiple light scattering techniques and visual assessment. The structured oils effectively delayed phase separation, highlighting the potential of glycerolysis in developing vegetable oil-based emulsions with improved functional properties and reduced saturated fatty acid content.

This research output is related to

Spoke 04

Food quality and nutrition

To push towards sustainable and tailored food and nutrition

Lead organisationUniMi

Spoke leaderPatrizia Riso
Research projectCO2MICS

Supercritical encapsulations of food micronutrients


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Principal investigators

Matteo Mario Scampicchio

Referred to

Spoke 04