Phenols and the antioxidant capacity of Mediterranean vegetables prepared with extra virgin olive oil using different domestic cooking techniques
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Ramirez Anaya, Jessica del Pilar; Samaniego Sánchez, Cristina; Castañeda Saucedo, Claudia; Villalón Mir, Marina; López García De La Serrana, HerminiaEditorial
Elsevier
Fecha
2015-04-28Resumen
Potato, tomato, eggplant and pumpkin were deep fried, sautéed and boiled in Mediterranean extra virgin
olive oil (EVOO), water, and a water/oil mixture (W/O). We determined the contents of fat, moisture, total
phenols (TPC) and eighteen phenolic compounds, as well as antioxidant capacity in the raw vegetables
and compared these with contents measured after cooking. Deep frying and sautéing led to increased
fat contents and TPC, whereas both types of boiling (in water and W/O) reduced the same. The presence
of EVOO in cooking increased the phenolics identified in the raw foods as oleuropein, pinoresinol, hydroxytyrosol
and tyrosol, and the contents of vegetable phenolics such as chlorogenic acid and rutin. All the
cooking methods conserved or increased the antioxidant capacity measured by DPPH, FRAP and ABTS.
Multivariate analyses showed that each cooked vegetable developed specific phenolic and antioxidant
activity profiles resulting from the characteristics of the raw vegetables and the cooking techniques.





