Antioxidant and sensorial properties of acacia honey supplemented with prunes
0106 biological sciences
prunes
0404 agricultural biotechnology
phenolics and flavonoids
antioxidant activity
T1-995
Acacia honey
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
01 natural sciences
Technology (General)
sensorial properties
DOI:
10.2298/apt1243293t
Publication Date:
2012-12-13T11:30:13Z
AUTHORS (8)
ABSTRACT
The changes in total phenol and flavonoid content, as well as antioxidant
activity was monitored in acacia honey supplemented with prunes in 20, 30 and
40% mass concentrations. The total phenolic content increased by 2.5 times
(from 16.18 to 41.64 mg GAE/100 g) with increasing concentration of prunes in
honey, while the increase in flavonoid content was even higher, approximately
11.5-fold (from 2.65 to 30.86 mg RE/100 g). The addition of prunes also
improved the antioxidant activity of acacia honey. The honey samples with
highest content of prunes, 40%, exhibited the best antioxidant activity
measured by hydroxyl radical sacvenging assay (EC50 ?OH=4.56 mg/ml),
2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) free radical scavenging assay (EC50
DPPH=16.48 mg/ml), and reducing power (EC50 RP=81.17 mg/ml). Judging from the
high correlation coefficients, ranging from 0.771 to 0.947 for total
phenolics, and from 0.862 to 0.993 for total flavonoids, it is obvious that
these compounds were associated with the antioxidant mechanisms. On the other
hand, sensorial properties of supplemented honeys were lower than that of
pure acacia honey, where flavor of supplemented honey was the least affected.
Our results indicate that the supplementation of honey with prunes improves
antioxidant activity of honey by enriching the phenolic composition, with
slight modifications in sensorial characteristics.
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