Development of a Stable Isotope Dilution Assay for the Quantification of 5-Methyl-(<i>E</i>)-2-hepten-4-one: Application to Hazelnut Oils and Hazelnuts
Petra Pfnuer, Taiki Matsui, Werner Grosch, H. Guth, Thomas Hofmann, Peter Schieberle
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Abstract
A stable isotope dilution assay was developed for the quantitation of the hazelnut odorant 5-methyl-(E)-2-hepten-4-one by mass chromatography using synthesized [(2)H](2)-5-methyl-(E)-2-hepten-4-one as the internal standard. Application of the method on two batches of commercial hazelnut oils, processed from either roasted or unroasted nuts, revealed 6.4 microg 5-methyl-(E)-2-hepten-4-one per kg of unroasted oil whereas 315.8 microg per kg was determined in the roasted nut oil. The about 50-fold higher amount of 5-methyl-(E)-2-hepten-4-one in roasted hazelnut oil suggested the necessity of a thermal treatment to generate the flavor compound. Pan frying of raw hazelnuts (9 to 15 min) or boiling of the crushed nut material for 1 h in water led to an increase of 5-methyl-(E)-2-hepten-4-one by factors of 600 and 800, respectively, thereby corroborating that the major part of the nut flavorant is formed during heat treatment from a yet unknown precursor in hazelnuts.
Extracted Claims
3 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
pan frying increases 5-methyl-(E)-2-hepten-4-one concentration
“Pan frying of raw hazelnuts (9 to 15 min) or boiling of the crushed nut material for 1 h in water led to an increase of 5-methyl-(E)-2-hepten-4-one by factors of 600 and 800, respectively, thereby cor...”
boiling increases 5-methyl-(E)-2-hepten-4-one concentration
“Pan frying of raw hazelnuts (9 to 15 min) or boiling of the crushed nut material for 1 h in water led to an increase of 5-methyl-(E)-2-hepten-4-one by factors of 600 and 800, respectively, thereby cor...”
5-methyl-(E)-2-hepten-4-one increases concentration
“Application of the method on two batches of commercial hazelnut oils, processed from either roasted or unroasted nuts, revealed 6.4 microg 5-methyl-(E)-2-hepten-4-one per kg of unroasted oil whereas 3...”