Subscriber access provided by CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
Article
Study of Volatile Compounds of Virgin Olive Oils with “Frostbitten Olives” Sensory Defect Inmaculada Romero, Diego Luis Garcia-Gonzalez, Ramon Aparicio-Ruiz, and Maria Teresa Morales J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • Publication Date (Web): 10 May 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 10, 2017
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 27
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Study of Volatile Compounds of Virgin Olive Oils with “Frostbitten Olives” Sensory Defect
Inmaculada Romero†, Diego L. García-González†*, Ramón Aparicio-Ruiz†, María T. Morales‡
†
, Instituto de la Grasa (CSIC), Campus Universidad Pablo de Olavide - Edificio 46, Ctra. de Utrera, km. 1 - 41013 – Sevilla, Spain.
‡
, Department of Analytical Chemistry, University of Seville, C/ Prof. García González, 2, 41012 - Sevilla, Spain.
*Corresponding author (Tel: +34954611550; E-mail:
[email protected])
1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
1
ABSTRACT
2
The freeze injuries in olives are responsible for the ‘frostbitten olives’ sensory
3
defect that is sometimes detected in virgin olive oil. This defect is becoming one of the
4
most common negative attributes today because the climate change has modified the
5
weather patterns. The temperature changes can take place abruptly, with rapid freeze-
6
thaw cycles, or gradually. These changes produce significant alterations in the quality of
7
the oils. This study analyzed the volatile composition of virgin olive oils characterized
8
with ‘frostbitten olives’ defect. The volatile information allowed grouping these oils
9
into two types characterized with two different profiles. One of them is characterized by
10
“soapy” and “strawberry-like” perceptions and the presence of two volatile compounds
11
(ethyl 2-methyl butanoate and ethyl propanoate). The second profile is characterized by
12
“wood” and “humidity” descriptors, and a high concentration of two volatiles (pentanal,
13
and octanal). These results on volatiles explain the existence of two sensory profiles
14
associated to the “frostbitten olives” defect.
15 16
Keywords: virgin olive oil, volatiles, ‘frostbitten olives’ defect, quality.
17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 27
Page 3 of 27
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
26
INTRODUCTION
27
According to different regulations1,2 virgin olive oils are classified into several
28
categories. Extra virgin oils (EVOO) are characterized by the absence of sensory defects
29
while the other categories -virgin (VOO), ordinary (OVOO) and lampante (LVOO) -
30
could have sensory defects with a perception intensity that ranges from low to very
31
high.1 Several malpractices related to olive oil processing and inadequate olive oil
32
storage are responsible for olive oil sensory defects though severe climatic conditions
33
and olive infestations also produce them.
34
The four most known sensory defects (fusty, rancid, winey-vinegary and
35
mustiness-humidity) have been widely studied3 and their volatile markers are well
36
described as well as the origin and causes of the defects. However, other sensory
37
defects, which were unusual only a few decades ago, are becoming much more common
38
today and little is known about their chemical characteristics. The change on the
39
weather conditions in the last years is leading to a higher incidence of sensory defects
40
produced by a non-adequate temperature during ripening of olives. Thus, low
41
temperatures can damage the olives before harvesting so modifying the chemical
42
composition and sensory quality of the final product. This undesirable phenomenon
43
results in the olive oil off-flavor called ‘frostbitten olives’, which is one of the sensory
44
defects described in the current regulation.4 This sensory defect is becoming one of the
45
most common negative attributes today because the climate change has leaded to new
46
weather patterns characterized with several freeze-thaw cycles in warm autumns and in
47
the beginning of winters. Thus, olive groves are often affected by frost within the
48
Mediterranean basin5 and in new producing countries such as Australia, Argentina and
49
USA.6-8 Previous studies have revealed that frost damage caused changes in the
50
composition of virgin olive oils such as slight decreases in chlorophyll and carotenoid
3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
51
contents.9,10 These study also showed that virgin olive oils from olives affected by
52
freeze injured are characterized with low stability, pungency and bitterness.
53
Numerous studies have been carried out on the characterization of virgin olive
54
oils of different qualities and categories by quantitative analysis of the volatile
55
compounds,3,11-13 but no study has been carried out on the composition of volatile
56
compounds of ‘frostbitten olives’ sensory defect. Since the frost of the olives produce
57
chemical and biochemical changes in the virgin olive oil14-16, it is expected to determine
58
a characteristic volatile profile associated to oils with ‘frostbitten olives’ defect. Thus,
59
the aim of this paper is the characterization of the volatile composition that explain the
60
occurrence of ‘frostbitten olives’ sensory defect and to select the most characteristic
61
compounds associated to the identified sensory profiles.
62 63
MATERIALS AND METHODS
64
Reagents
65
Octane (99%), pentanal (98%), hexanal (98%), heptanal (95%), octanal (98%),
66
nonanal (95%), E-2-hexenal (97%), E-2-heptenal (98%), ethanol (96%), butan-1-ol
67
(99%), butan-2-ol (99.5%), 3-methyl-butan-1-ol (98%), hexan-1-ol (98%), E-3-hexen-1-
68
ol (98%), heptan-2-ol (99%), 4-methyl-pentan-2-one (99%), pentan-3-one (99.5%),
69
heptan-2-one (98%), 1-penten-3-one (98%), 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one (99%), octan-3-
70
one (97%), acetic acid (99%), propanoic acid (99.5%), butanoic acid (99%), pentanoic
71
acid (99%), ethyl acetate (99.5%), ethyl propanoate (99%), ethyl butanoate (98%) and
72
ethyl 2-methylbutanoate (94%) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO),
73
The standards of methyl heptadecanoate (C17:0 methyl ester), silica gel 60-200
74
µm mesh, Sudan I (1-phenylazo-2-naphtol), phenolphthalein, starch soluble, potassium
75
iodide, potassium iodate, sodium thiosulfate pentahydrate, n-hexane and n-heptane were
4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 4 of 27
Page 5 of 27
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
76
purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Ethyl ether was from Romil Ltd.
77
(Cambridge, U.K.).
78 79
Samples
80
Twenty-two samples of olives were collected from orchards placed in the
81
Spanish main producer regions - Andalusia and Castilla-La Mancha - (Table 1). The
82
samples were made at industrial scale from olives affected by frost during the crop
83
2013/2014 that were processed in two-phase centrifugation systems to obtain filtered
84
virgin olive oils (VOO). The samples were produced by the same condition. All VOO
85
samples were described with the ‘frostbitten olives’ sensory defect by the panelists of a
86
panel test under the procedure of IOC4. Discussions with agronomists at the olive mills
87
accredited the drop of the temperature before collecting the olives (from -2 ºC and -4 ºC
88
as minimum temperature). No other sensory defect was detected in those samples,
89
excepting in samples 15 and 17 where a slight rancidity was also detected as a
90
secondary defect. A set of seven extra virgin olive oils (EVOO), provided by the same
91
producers, was also analyzed.
92 93
Quality parameters
94
Free acidity, peroxide value (PV) and specific UV absorption at 232 nm (K232)
95
and 270 nm (K270) were determined according to the methods of the International
96
Organization for Standardization (ISO), ISO 66017, ISO 396018 and ISO 365619,
97
respectively, as they are quality parameters included in the trade standard regulation of
98
the International Oil Council (IOC).1 For each parameter, two replicates of samples
99
were analyzed.
5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
100
The quantitation of fatty acid ethyl esters (FAEEs) was carried out according to
101
the IOC method for the determination of the content of waxes, fatty acid methyl esters
102
(FAMEs) and fatty acid ethyl esters (FAEEs) by capillary gas chromatography using 3
103
grams of silica.20
104 105
Sensory assessment of olive oils
106
Sensory assessment was carried out by 19 trained panelists (16 females and 3
107
males between 25 and 50 years old) of an accredited panel who were trained for
108
recognition of VOO selected attributes according to the methodology proposed by the
109
International Olive Council.4 Each sample (15 mL) were tasted in normalized blue-
110
coloured glass containers to mask the colour differences. The temperature of the oils
111
was kept at 28±2 °C. Samples were labeled with a digit code and served following a
112
balanced rotation plan.
113 114
Odor threshold of volatile compounds
115
Odor detection threshold for each volatile compound was determined by means of the
116
procedure described by Luna et al., 2006.12 The volatile compounds were diluted in a
117
refined olive oil, which was previously tested by SPME-GC (described below) to
118
guarantee the absence of oxidation compounds. All the testing sessions were carried out
119
by 8 assessors (4 males and 4 females) on the same weekday (Tuesday morning) to
120
improve the consistency of results. Three samples were presented to the assessors,
121
following the triangle test method, and the results were statistically analyzed. A result
122
was considered consistent when at least 75% of the assessors provided the same odor
123
threshold. Before the triangle tests, an exploratory analysis was carried out by
124
presenting a series of dilutions to the assessors to estimate the concentration range
6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 6 of 27
Page 7 of 27
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
125
where the odor threshold may be placed. Fifteen milliliters of each sample were kept in
126
standardized tasting glasses at 29 ± 2ºC for 15 min and then tested. The sensory
127
description of the compounds shown in Table 2 was provided by assessors who smelled
128
the dilutions at a concentration above the odor threshold.
129 130
Determination of volatiles
131
The sample preparation was carried out according to the method applied in
132
previous works.21 The concentration step was carried out on a Combipal (CTC
133
Analytics AG, Zwingen, Switzerland). An olive oil sample (2 g) was placed in a 20 mL
134
glass vial, tightly capped with polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) septum, and left for 10
135
min at 40 ºC to allow for the equilibration of the volatiles in the headspace. After the
136
equilibration time, the septum covering each vial was pierced with a SPME needle and
137
the fiber was exposed to the headspace for 40 min. The SPME fiber (1 cm length and
138
50/30 µm film thickness) was purchased from Supelco (Bellefonte, PA), and it was
139
endowed
140
divinylbenzene/carboxen/polydimethylsiloxane (DVB/CAR/PDMS). The fiber was
141
previously conditioned following the instructions of the supplier.
with
the
Stable
Flex
stationary
phase
of
142
The volatiles adsorbed by the fiber were thermally desorbed in the hot injection
143
port of a GC for 5 min at 260 ºC with the purge valve off (splitless mode) and injected
144
in a TR-WAX capillary column (60 m × 0.25 mm i.d., 0.25 µm; Teknokroma, Spain) of
145
a Varian 3900 gas chromatograph (Palo Alto, CA) with flame ionization detector (FID).
146
The carrier gas was hydrogen, at a flow rate of 1.5 mL/min. The oven temperature was
147
held at 40 ºC for 10 min and then programmed to rise at 3 ºC/min to a final temperature
148
of 200 ºC. The signal was recorded and processed with the WorkStation (v6.41)
149
software. Each sample was analyzed in duplicate.
7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
150
The identification of the volatile compounds was first carried out by mass
151
spectrometry21 and later checked with standards3,22, which were purchased from Sigma-
152
Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Table 2 shows the volatile compounds identified in this study.
153
The quantification of volatile compounds was carried out with 4-methyl-2-pentanol as
154
an internal standard.
155 156
Gas chromatography-olfactometry
157
Gas chromatography-olfactometry (GC-O) was applied to VOO samples to
158
assess the aroma notes produced by volatile compounds. GC-O analyses were
159
performed on a Varian 3900 GC (Palo Alto, CA) equipped with an ATAS olfactory port
160
OP275 with a glass nasal cone (Veldhoven, Netherlands). The 40% of the flow was
161
directed to the FID, while 60% was directed into the heated (40 ºC) sniffing port.
162
The GC-O analysis was performed by four non-smoking and non-anosmic
163
assessors (3 females and 1 male). The perceived odor intensity was evaluated and
164
recorded using the scale of 1 (weak odor intensity), 2 (moderate odor intensity) and 3
165
(strong odor intensity). Only when the four assessors smelled the compound, the aroma
166
was taken into account. Assessors were suggested to limit the description of sensory
167
perceptions to the descriptors defined by the International Olive Council4 when possible
168
although some perceptions were named with different semantic terms. A consensus-
169
building discussion was held with assessors to decide the final sensory descriptors
170
qualifying the samples.
171
These sensory descriptors were processed in terms of their modified frequency
172
(MF), which is the result of combining intensity and frequency of detection of
173
descriptors, according with the formula proposed by Dravnieks (1985): MFሺ%ሻ = ඥFሺ%ሻ × Iሺ%ሻ
8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 8 of 27
Page 9 of 27
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
174
where F(%) is the detection of frequency of an aroma attribute expressed as percentage,
175
and I(%) is the average intensity expressed as percentage of maximum intensity. The
176
odors detected with a MF (%) higher than 50 correspond to the most relevant
177
compounds present in each sample from a sensory viewpoint.23-24
178 179
Statistical analysis
180
Univariate and multivariate algorithms were applied by means of Statistica 8.0
181
(Statsoft, Tulsa, OK). Brown-Forsythe25 tests was used to select the compounds that
182
showed significant differences (p1 in “H”
252
samples although only three (ethyl propanoate, ethyl 2-methylbutanoate and octanal)
253
were characterized with “soapy” and “strawberry-like” sensory perceptions. From the
254
perspective of OAV, ethyl 2-methylbutanoate (OAV=83.57) is the volatile with the
255
highest significance in “H” samples. Other relevant volatiles that were associated to
256
undesirable sensory perceptions of “H” samples were E-2-heptenal (OAV=16.40) and
257
heptan-2-ol (OAV=3.00). In addition to the compounds that contribute to negative
258
attributes, hexanal (OAV=7.70) and hexan-1-ol (OAV=5.60) were associated to the
259
usual pleasant and green sensory perceptions of these VOOs.
260
The average profile of “D” samples does not differ from “H” samples in a
261
qualitative but in a quantitative aspect. Thus, these results show that the olives
262
underwent similar chemical processes of degradation due to the low temperatures,
263
although with some variation in the volatile composition. The Brown-Forsythe test
264
showed that “D” samples were characterized with higher concentrations of pentanal and
265
octanal compared with “H” samples (Table 2). In the case of pentanal, the concentration
266
was three times higher in “D” samples. This compound provided attributes qualified as
267
“wood, oily” (OAV=2.38) while octanal was qualified as “soapy” (OAV=6.16). These
268
attributes corresponded to the sensory descriptors identified by panelists. E-2-heptenal
269
also contributed with a “woody” aroma with a high OAV (20.40) but this compound
270
was not selected by Brown-Forsythe tests (Table 2). Some studies carried out with
271
peppers submitted to a slow frozen process also showed high concentration of
272
aldehydes.32 Although “D” samples show a profile of volatiles responsible for
273
undesirable descriptors higher than “H” samples, their profiles also have volatiles
12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 12 of 27
Page 13 of 27
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
274
(hexanal, E-2-hexenal and hexan-1-ol) responsible for positive attributes with OAVs
275
>1.
276
In order to facilitate the sensory interpretation of the volatile composition, a GC-
277
O method was applied to evaluate the sensory characteristics and intensity of the
278
odorants (odor impact zones) of volatiles. In particular, the study was focused on
279
identifying the odour impact zones associated to the cherished strawberry-like
280
perception of “H” samples since this attribute has not been studied before. Table 2
281
shows the odorants responsible for the flavor as well as the odour intensity and the
282
modified frequency (MF%), a mixture of intensity and frequency of detection.33 The
283
study revealed that there were four odor impact zones that were basically named
284
“sweet”, “fruity”, “green” and “rancid”. In terms of sensory impact, and considering
285
these 4 odour impact zones, ten volatile compounds were the most descriptive
286
(MF%>50) (Table 2). Ethyl propanoate, hexanal and E-2-hexenal showed the highest
287
percentage of MF (MF%=95.7) followed by ethyl 2-methylbutanoate (MF%=79.0) and
288
hexan-1-ol (MF%=70.7). Only six of these compounds - ethyl propanoate, ethyl 2-
289
methylbutanoate, hexanal, hexan-1-ol, nonanal and acetic acid - have OAVs >1.0. In
290
general terms, the most relevant impact zone (higher MF%) was “fruity” and two of the
291
compounds associated to this zone were those esters responsible for the strawberry-like
292
perception (e.g. ethyl propanoate and ethyl 2-methylbutanoate). This result agrees with
293
the volatiles selected as markers of ‘frostbitten olives’ sensory defect in “H” samples.
294
Thus, the concluding information is that the relevant perceptions concern strawberry-
295
like, and fresh green sensory perceptions combined with others resulting from
296
fermentation, which is expected to occur in frostbitten olives where the fruit tissues are
297
damaged. The interpretation of the results was complemented with statistical analysis of
298
the data. The univariate algorithms - ANOVA and Brown-Forsythe test - were applied
13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
299
to distinguish between EVOOs and the both VOO groups (“D” and “H”), and between
300
these two kinds of VOOs from frosted olives as well. ANOVA test pointed out that ten
301
volatiles with OAV>1 in at least one of the three groups (“H” or “D” or “E”) (ethyl
302
propanoate, pentanal, butan-2-ol, ethyl butanoate, hexanal, octan-3-one, octanal, hexan-
303
1-ol, E-3-hexen-1-ol and nonanal) showed significant differences (p