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Featured researches published by Lorenzo Cerretani.


Food Chemistry | 2008

Chemical composition and oxidative stability of Tunisian monovarietal virgin olive oils with regard to fruit ripening.

Olfa Baccouri; Mokhtar Guerfel; Bechir Baccouri; Lorenzo Cerretani; Alessandra Bendini; Giovanni Lercker; Douja Daoud Ben Miled

The chemical composition of virgin olive oil may be influenced by genotype and different agronomic (i.e. fruit ripeness degree, water supply) and technological factors. This article reports the evaluation of the influence of the olive ripening stage on the quality indices, the major and the minor components and the oxidative stability of the two main monovarietal Tunisian cultivars (cvv. Chétoui and Chemlali) virgin olive oils. Moreover, the olives cv. Chétoui were tested in a rain-fed control and an irrigation regime. The oils sampled at five different ripeness stages were submitted to liquid chromatographic determination (HPLC-DAD/MSD) of their quali-quantitative phenolic and tocopherolic profiles. Moreover, the triacylglycerol and fatty acid compositions, and minor components such as squalene, pigments and their relation with the oil oxidative stability were evaluated. The tested oils showed very good correlation between the oxidative stability and the concentrations of total phenols, practically secoiridoids and α-tocopherol.


Food Chemistry | 2008

Comparative study on volatile compounds from Tunisian and Sicilian monovarietal virgin olive oils

Olfa Baccouri; Alessandra Bendini; Lorenzo Cerretani; Mokhtar Guerfel; Bechir Baccouri; Giovanni Lercker; Douja Daoud Ben Miled

The effects of ripening degree of olives on volatile profile of monovarietal virgin olive oils (VOO) from Tunisian and Sicilian cultivars were investigated. Fruits obtained from Tunisia (Chétoui and Chemlali) and Italy (Nocellara del Belice, Biancolilla and Cerasuola) were picked at three different stages of ripeness and then immediately processed. Moreover, the changes in volatile composition were evaluated in Chétoui variety as a function of the irrigation regime versus the rain-fed control. Using headspace-solid-phase microextraction (HS-SPME) technique coupled to GC-MS and GC-FID, the volatile compounds of the monovarietal virgin olive oils were identified and quantitatively analyzed. The proportions of different classes of volatiles of oils showed significant differences throughout the maturity process. The results suggest that adding to the genetic factor; agronomic conditions affect the volatile formation and therefore the organoleptic properties of VOO.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008

Effects of fly attack (Bactrocera oleae) on the phenolic profile and selected chemical parameters of olive oil.

Ana María Gómez-Caravaca; Lorenzo Cerretani; Alessandra Bendini; Antonio Segura-Carretero; Alberto Fernández-Gutiérrez; Michele Del Carlo; Dario Compagnone; Angelo Cichelli

The phenolic fraction of virgin olive oil influences both its quality and oxidative stability. One of the principal threats of the quality of olive fruit is the olive fly ( Bactrocera oleae) as it alters the chemical composition. The attack of this olive pest has been studied in order to evaluate its influence on the quality of virgin olive oil (free acidity, peroxide value, fatty acid composition, water content, oxidative stability, phenols, and antioxidant power of phenolic fraction). The study was performed using several virgin olive oils obtained from olives with different degrees of fly infestation. They were acquired in different Italian industrial mills from the Abruzzo region. Qualitative and quantitative analyses of phenolic profiles were performed by capillary electrophoresis-diode array detection, and electrochemical evaluation of the antioxidant power of the phenolic fraction was also carried out. These analyses demonstrated that the degree of fly attack was positively correlated with free acidity ( r = 0.77, p < 0.05) and oxidized products ( r = 0.58, p < 0.05), and negatively related to the oxidative stability index ( r = -0.54, p < 0.05) and phenolic content ( r = -0.50, p < 0.05), mainly with secoiridoid compounds. However, it has been confirmed that the phenolic fraction of olive oil depends on several parameters and that a clear correlation does not exist between the percentages of fly attack and phenolic content.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2008

Differential scanning calorimetry: a potential tool for discrimination of olive oil commercial categories.

Emma Chiavaro; Maria Teresa Rodriguez-Estrada; Carlo Barnaba; Elena Vittadini; Lorenzo Cerretani; Alessandra Bendini

Differential scanning calorimetry thermograms of five commercial categories of olive oils (extra virgin olive oil, olive oil, refined olive oil, olive-pomace oil and refined olive-pomace oil) were performed in both cooling and heating regimes. Overlapping transitions were resolved by deconvolution analysis and all thermal properties were related to major (triacylglycerols, total fatty acids) and minor (diacylglycerols, lipid oxidation products) chemical components. All oils showed two well distinguishable exothermic events upon cooling. Crystallization enthalpies were significantly lower in olive oils due to a more ordered crystal structure, which may be related to the higher triolein content. Pomace oils exhibited a significantly higher crystallization onset temperature and a larger transition range, possibly associated to the higher amount of diacylglycerols. Heating thermograms were more complex: all oils exhibited complex exo- and endothermic transitions that could differentiate samples especially with respect to the highest temperature endotherm. These preliminary results suggest that both cooling and heating thermograms obtained by means of differential scanning calorimetry may be useful for discriminating among olive oils of different commercial categories.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008

Bovine Serum Albumin Produces a Synergistic Increase in the Antioxidant Activity of Virgin Olive Oil Phenolic Compounds in Oil-in-Water Emulsions

Matteo Bonoli-Carbognin; Lorenzo Cerretani; Alessandra Bendini; M. Pilar Almajano; Michael H. Gordon

Virgin olive oil is valued for its flavor, but unacceptable off-flavors may develop on storage in food products containing this oil due to oxidation. The oxidative stability of oil-in-water emulsions containing bovine serum albumin (BSA) and virgin olive oil phenolic compounds was studied. Four oil-in-water emulsions with and without BSA and phenols isolated from virgin olive oil were prepared. These model systems were stored at 60 degrees C to speed up lipid oxidation. Primary and secondary oxidation products were monitored every three days. Peroxide values and conjugated diene contents were determined as measures of the primary oxidation products. p-Anisidine values and volatile compounds were determined as measures of the secondary oxidation products. This latter determination was carried out by headspace solid-phase microextraction coupled with gas chromatography. Although olive oil phenolic compounds and BSA contributed some antioxidant activity when present as individual additives, the combination of BSA with phenols in an emulsion showed 58-127% synergy, depending on which analytical method was used in the calculation. The emulsion containing phenolic compounds and BSA showed a low level of deterioration after 45 days of storage at 60 degrees C.


Journal of Separation Science | 2008

CZE separation of strawberry anthocyanins with acidic buffer and comparison with HPLC.

Patrizia Comandini; Giampaolo Blanda; Andrea Cardinali; Lorenzo Cerretani; Alessandra Bendini; Maria Fiorenza Caboni

Anthocyanins, the major colourants of strawberries, are polar pigments that are positively charged at low pH. Herein, we have assessed a new analytical method for the separation of anthocyanins using CZE. Acidic buffer solutions (pH <2) were employed in order to maintain pigments in the cation flavylium form and achieve high molar absorptivity at 510 nm. These spectral properties enabled us to identify strawberry anthocyanins in a preliminary stage by detection in the visible range, although the method was optimised at 280 nm to obtain the best S/N. The effects of buffer composition highlighted the necessity of adding an organic modifier to the running buffer to obtain a suitable separation. The electrophoretic method permitted the separation of the three main anthocyanins of strawberry extracts, namely pelargonidin 3-glucoside (Pg-glu), pelargonidin 3-rutinoside and cyanidin 3-glucoside. The electrophoretic results, expressed as retention time and separation efficiency of the major anthocyanin (Pg-glu), were compared to those achieved in HPLC, the analytical technique traditionally used for the investigation of anthocyanins in vegetable matrix. The content of Pg-glu in strawberries (cv. Camarosa), calculated with HPCE and HPLC methods, resulted respectively in 11.41 mg/L and 11.37 mg/L.


European Food Research and Technology | 2008

Effect of vacuum impregnation on the phenolic content of Granny Smith and Stark Delicious frozen apple cvv

Giampaolo Blanda; Lorenzo Cerretani; Alessandra Bendini; Andrea Cardinali; Andrea Scarpellini; Giovanni Lercker


European Journal of Lipid Science and Technology | 2008

Effect of olive fruit freezing on oxidative stability of virgin olive oil

Alba Poerio; Alessandra Bendini; Lorenzo Cerretani; Matteo Bonoli-Carbognin; Giovanni Lercker


European Food Research and Technology | 2008

Effect of frozen storage on the phenolic content of vacuum impregnated Granny Smith and Stark Delicious apple cvv.

Giampaolo Blanda; Lorenzo Cerretani; Andrea Cardinali; Alessandra Bendini; Giovanni Lercker


Agro Food Industry Hi-tech | 2008

Improving of oxidative stability and nutritional properties of virgin olive oils by fruit de-stoning

Lorenzo Cerretani; Olfa Baccouri; Alessandra Bendini

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