Cooking influence on physico-chemical fruit characteristics of eggplant (Solanum melongena L.)

•Different eggplant genotypes showed different behavior in composition after cooking.•Retention of chlorogenic acid was higher after grilling.•Delphinidin glycosides were more retained in boiled samples.•Eggplant cooking induced an increase in free radical scavenging activities. Physico-chemical tra...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food chemistry 2016-03, Vol.194, p.835-842
Hauptverfasser: Lo Scalzo, Roberto, Fibiani, Marta, Francese, Gianluca, D’Alessandro, Antonietta, Rotino, Giuseppe L., Conte, Pellegrino, Mennella, Giuseppe
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Different eggplant genotypes showed different behavior in composition after cooking.•Retention of chlorogenic acid was higher after grilling.•Delphinidin glycosides were more retained in boiled samples.•Eggplant cooking induced an increase in free radical scavenging activities. Physico-chemical traits of three eggplant genotypes (“Tunisina”, “Buia” and “L 305”) were evaluated before and after two cooking treatments (grilling and boiling). Different genotypes revealed different changes after cooking, with “Tunisina” showing a better retention of phytochemicals with respect to other two genotypes. The main physical phenomena were water loss during grilling, and dry matter loss after boiling. Chlorogenic acid, the main phenolic in eggplant, resulted higher in grilled samples, while delphinidin glycosides resulted more retained in boiled samples. Glycoalkaloids, thiols and biogenic amines were generally stable, while 5-hydroxy-methyl-furfural was found only in grilled samples. Interestingly, Folin–Ciocalteu index and free radical scavenging capacity, measured with three different assays, were generally increased after cooking, with a greater formation of antioxidant substances in grilled samples. NMR relaxation experiments clarified the hypothesis about the changes of eggplant compounds in terms of decomposition of larger molecules and production of small ones after cooking.
ISSN:0308-8146
1873-7072
DOI:10.1016/j.foodchem.2015.08.063