Monday, August 18, 2008

An influence of cooking on fatty acid composition in three varieties of common beans and in lentil

Abstract  The fatty acid composition of three raw and cooked freeze-dried common bean varieties (Phaseolus vulgaris), namely enjevec, Semenarna 22 and Cipro, and of the lentil (Lens esculenta), var. Anicia, was determined and the influence of storage on their composition was studied. Analyses of fatty acid composition were conducted by in situ transesterification and capillary column gas-liquid chromatography. In raw milled beans average values of about 16% saturated fatty acids (SAT), 6% monosaturated fatty acids (MUFA) and 78% polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) were found. Somewhat different values of 15% of SAT, 25% MUFA and 60% PUFA were found in lentil. In cooked beans the content of all fatty acids was slightly decreased. In cooked lentil the decrease was almost 50%, but the ratios of SAT, MUFA and PUFA in both cases were practically the same. After two years of storage at 4 °C the fatty acid content in raw milled beans was unchanged, but altered in cooked ones. The amounts of linoleic (18:2, n-6) and -linolenic (18:3, n-3) acid decreased, but myristic (14:0), margaric (17:0) and arachidic (20:0) acids increased. It was found that freeze-dried cooked beans, prepared from raw seed beans, kept 2.5 years at 10 °C, have practically the same fatty acid composition as freeze-dried cooked beans 0.5 year after harvesting.

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