Food composition suitable for shallow frying comprising...

Food or edible material: processes – compositions – and products – Products per se – or processes of preparing or treating... – Fat or oil is basic ingredient other than butter in emulsion...

Reexamination Certificate

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C426S662000, C554S080000, C554S083000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06733814

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to food compositions suitable for shallow frying. The invention further relates to a process for hydrolysis of native lecithin, resulting in a product suitable for addition to food compositions suitable for shallow frying.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Food compositions suitable for shallow frying are well known. Examples of such food compositions are butter, margarine, including liquid margarine, spreads, such as low fat spread and cooking milk. The food compositions are often multifunctional, i.e. they can be used for different purposes, e.g. baking and spreading on bread, next to suitability in frying.
When used in shallow frying, the spattering performance of the food compositions is important. Spattering during shallow frying should be avoided as much as possible.
Lecithin is well known to have an anti-spattering effect. The improvement of spattering performance is therefore an important reason for incorporation of lecithin in food compositions
Lecithin is a widely used term for a complex mixture of phosphatides produced from a variety of vegetable and animal sources. Examples of the phosphatides are phosphatidyl choline (PC), phosphatidyl ethanolamine (PE), phosphatidyl inositol (PI), phosphatidic acid (PA) and acetylated phosphatidyl ethanolamine (aPE). Hydrolyzed phosphatides are designated by the prefix lyso-, for instance lyso-PC or LPC.
Vegetable lecithins are derived from crude vegetable oils or fats, in which the lecithins are present as a colloidal solution. They are usually removed in a degumming step in which lecithin is precipitated, e.g. by injection of steam into the oil or fat or by injection of water or an aqueous solution.
The lecithins are available in the market as a very viscous substance containing 60-65 wt. % phosphatides, 30-35 wt. % oil and about 5-10% of other compounds, e.g. sterol. Such mixture is herein referred to as native lecithin.
Lecithins are usually designated depending on their origin (e.g. soybean lecithin, sunflower lecithin, rapeseed lecithin, canola lecithin, cotton seed lecithin, egg lecithin, etc).
By far the most important native lecithin is soybean lecithin, which is derived from soya bean oil. Next to native soybean lecithin, also de-oiled soybean lecithin (from which the oil fraction has been removed) and hydrolyzed soybean lecithin are known and commercially available.
Due to the large predominance of soybean lecithin relative to the other lecithins, the skilled person generally uses the expression lecithin when actually soybean lecithin is meant.
The use of lecithin as anti-spattering agent in a food composition is for instance illustrated in EP-B-265 003, which discloses a food composition with reduced fat content, wherein the fat phase has up to 75 wt. % fat. The emulsion comprises an emulsifier system with a mixture of phospholipids containing phosphatidyl choline and phosphatidyl ethanolamine in a ratio exceeding 3:1. The lecithin emulsifier system is prepared by extracting soybean lecithin with a polar extraction solvent, for instance an alcohol.
According to U.S. Pat. No. 3,505,074 the emulsifying properties of phosphatides, for example as anti-spattering agent in margarine are improved by partial hydrolysis of the phosphatides.
EP-B-253 429 discloses a surface-active composition, which comprises at least 3% lysophosphatidylethanolamine and wherein the hydrolysis ratio of the degree of hydrolysis of phosphatidylethanolamine and the degree of hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine is higher than 1.5. The surface-active composition, which is reported to give improved spattering performance, is prepared in a process, which involves fractionation and subsequent hydrolysis.
Although the phosphatide compositions prepared according to the above prior art show good spattering performance, they have the disadvantage that they involve in their preparation additional process steps like fractionation and hydrolysis. A process step involving hydrolysis further has the potential disadvantage to increase the level of foaming of food compositions comprising the hydrolyzed lecithin. Therefore the use of native soybean lecithin is still very common in frying compositions.
We have found that although the spattering performance of native soybean lecithin may be sufficient in food compositions comprising 80 wt. % of a fatty phase, it is insufficient when food composition are prepared having a lower fat content, e.g. 70 wt. % fat, 60 wt. % fat or below.
J. Hollo et al., JAOCS, Vol. 70, no. 10 (1993), 997-1001 discusses the fractionation, acylation and enzymatic hydrolysis of sunflower lecithin and its possibilities for utilization. The hydrolysis time reported is 1 to 5 hours. No description of use of sunflower lecithin in food compositions is given.
S. Zmarlicki, Prezemysl-Spozywczy,53 (11), 63-65 describes that a series of 23 protein-free dairy spreads were produced having 0.4% sunflower lecithin as emulsifier. The spreads were produced using 40-80% anhydrous milk-fat, 0-30% sunflower oil (0-42.8% in the fat phase) and 0.02-0.04% commercial butter flavouring, and had good taste and flavour properties. The spreads have a high animal fat content and the spattering performance in shallow frying is not mentioned.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An object for the invention is to improve the spattering performance of the prior art food compositions, when used in shallow frying.
A further object of the invention is to provide a food composition that has improved properties related to both spattering performance and foaming.
Another object of the invention is to provide a food composition having health benefits, for instance a lowering effect on the level of blood cholesterol in humans.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide a food composition that can be prepared from naturally occurring ingredients with less process steps involved.
One or more of these objects are attained according to the invention providing a food composition, comprising triglycerides, wherein at least 70 wt. % of the triglycerides is of vegetable origin, and 0.05-3 wt. % sunflower lecithin.
One or more of the objects is further attained by a food composition, suitable for shallow frying comprising 0.05-3 wt. % sunflower lecithin, wherein the sunflower lecithin is hydrolyzed or fractionated.
Hydrolyzed sunflower lecithin is herein understood to be sunflower lecithin, wherein the degree of hydrolysation as defined in the examples is 0.05 or higher.
The invention further provides an improved process for the hydrolysis of lecithin, in which the hydrolysis time is reduced, wherein sunflower oil is subjected to a degumming operation to give native sunflower lecithin, wherein the native sunflower lecithin is subjected to hydrolysis, characterized in that the difference in acid value between the hydrolysis product and the native sunflower lecithin (&Dgr;AV) is 2-15.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The following definitions will be used throughout the description and claims. Where ranges are mentioned, the expression from a to b is meant to indicate from and including a, up to and including b, unless indicated otherwise. The term's ‘oil’ and ‘fat’ are used interchangeably.
The following abbreviations of phospholipids are used herein: PC (Phosphatidyl choline), PI (Phosphatidyl Inositol), PE (Phosphatidyl ethanolamine) aPE (acetylated phosphatidyl ethanolamine) and PA (Phosphatidic acid), the hydrolysed forms of these phospholipids being indicated with the suffix L (for instance LPC for lyso-phosphatidyl choline).
The food compositions according to the invention may be water-in-oil emulsions, for instance spreads or margarines, oil-in-water emulsions suitable for shallow frying, such as for instance water-continuous shallow frying media or may substantially consist of fat or oil.
The amounts of the oil and water phase in the product are not critical. For instance the food composition may comprise 30-100 wt. % fat phase and 0-70 wt. % aqueous phase. Preferably the food composition comprises 40-100 wt. % fat phase and 0-60 wt. % aque

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