Dybkowska Ewa, Sadowska Anna, Rakowska Rita, Dębowska Maria, Świderski Franciszek, Świąder Katarzyna
Warsaw University of Life Sciences - SGGW, Faculty of Human Nutrition and Consumer Sciences, Department of Functional Food, Ecological Food and Commodities, Warsaw, Poland
Rocz Panstw Zakl Hig. 2017;68(4):347-353.
The roasting stage constitutes a key component in the manufacturing process of natural coffee because temperature elicits changes in bioactive compounds such as polyphenols and that Maillard-reaction compounds appear, thus affecting the product’s sensory and antioxidant properties. Actual contents of these compounds may depend on which region the coffee is cultivated as well as the extent to which the beans are roasted
To determine polyphenols content and antioxidant activity in the ‘Arabica’ coffee type coming from various world regions of its cultivation and which have undergone industrial roasting. Also to establish which coffee, taking into account the degree of roasting (ie. light, medium and strong), is nutritionally the most beneficial
The study material was natural coffee beans (100% Arabica) roasted to various degrees, as aforementioned, that had been cultivated in Brazil, Ethiopia, Columbia and India. Polyphenols were measured in the coffee beans by spectrophotometric means based on the Folin-Ciocalteu reaction, whereas antioxidant activity was measured colourimetrically using ABTS+ cat-ionic radicals
Polyphenol content and antioxidant activity were found to depend both on the coffee’s origin and degree of roasting. Longer roasting times resulted in greater polyphenol degradation. The highest polyphenol concentrations were found in lightly roasted coffee, ranging 39.27 to 43.0 mg/g, whereas levels in medium and strongly roasted coffee respectively ranged 34.06 to 38.43 mg/g and 29.21 to 36.89 mg/g. Antioxidant activity however significantly rose with the degree of roasting, where strongly roasted coffee had higher such activity than lightly roasted coffee. This can be explained by the formation of Maillard-reaction compounds during roasting, leading then to the formation of antioxidant melanoidin compounds which, to a large extent, compensate for the decrease in polyphenols during roasting
Polyphenols levels and antioxidant activities in the studied Arabica coffee beans that had undergone roasting depended on the cultivation region of the world. Longer roasting caused a significant decline in polyphenols compound levels (from 7.3% to 32.1%) in the coffee beans. Antioxidant activities of coffee increased with roasting, despite reduced levels of natural antioxidants. From a nutritional standpoint, the most favoured coffees are those lightly or medium roasted
烘焙阶段是天然咖啡制造过程中的关键环节,因为温度会引发生物活性化合物(如多酚)的变化,美拉德反应化合物也会出现,从而影响产品的感官和抗氧化特性。这些化合物的实际含量可能取决于咖啡的种植地区以及咖啡豆的烘焙程度。
测定来自世界不同种植地区且经过工业烘焙的“阿拉比卡”咖啡品种中的多酚含量和抗氧化活性。同时,考虑烘焙程度(即浅度、中度和深度),确定哪种咖啡在营养方面最有益。
研究材料为上述不同烘焙程度的天然咖啡豆(100%阿拉比卡),这些咖啡豆分别产自巴西、埃塞俄比亚、哥伦比亚和印度。基于福林 - 西奥尔特反应,通过分光光度法测定咖啡豆中的多酚含量,而抗氧化活性则使用ABTS⁺阳离子自由基通过比色法进行测定。
发现多酚含量和抗氧化活性既取决于咖啡的产地,也取决于烘焙程度。烘焙时间越长,多酚降解越严重。浅度烘焙咖啡中的多酚浓度最高,范围为39.27至43.0毫克/克,而中度和深度烘焙咖啡中的多酚含量分别为34.06至38.43毫克/克和29.21至36.89毫克/克。然而,抗氧化活性随烘焙程度显著升高,深度烘焙咖啡的抗氧化活性高于浅度烘焙咖啡。这可以通过烘焙过程中美拉德反应化合物的形成来解释,进而导致抗氧化类黑素化合物的形成,在很大程度上弥补了烘焙过程中多酚的减少。
经过烘焙的阿拉比卡咖啡豆中的多酚水平和抗氧化活性取决于其在世界的种植地区。较长时间的烘焙导致咖啡豆中多酚化合物水平显著下降(从7.3%降至32.1%)。尽管天然抗氧化剂水平降低,但咖啡的抗氧化活性随烘焙而增加。从营养角度来看,最受欢迎的咖啡是浅度或中度烘焙的咖啡。