WO2016034897A1 - Improvements in frying technology - Google Patents

Improvements in frying technology Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2016034897A1
WO2016034897A1 PCT/GB2015/052568 GB2015052568W WO2016034897A1 WO 2016034897 A1 WO2016034897 A1 WO 2016034897A1 GB 2015052568 W GB2015052568 W GB 2015052568W WO 2016034897 A1 WO2016034897 A1 WO 2016034897A1
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oil
frying
cooking
fryer
silicate
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PCT/GB2015/052568
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French (fr)
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Andrew J. CLAY
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Oil Preservation Technologies Limited
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Publication of WO2016034897A1 publication Critical patent/WO2016034897A1/en

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11BPRODUCING, e.g. BY PRESSING RAW MATERIALS OR BY EXTRACTION FROM WASTE MATERIALS, REFINING OR PRESERVING FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES, e.g. LANOLIN, FATTY OILS OR WAXES; ESSENTIAL OILS; PERFUMES
    • C11B3/00Refining fats or fatty oils
    • C11B3/10Refining fats or fatty oils by adsorption

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improvements in technology relating to methods for the treatment of cooking oils and fats.
  • references to oils should be interpreted as being references to animal, vegetable, nut or synthetic oils and fats (which are generally solid at room temperatures).
  • references to fryers herein should be taken as including any frying equipment, chamber, pan, tank, commercial, domestic or industrial fryer.
  • Deep fat frying has become one of the most popular methods of cooking in domestic, restaurant and industrial establishments throughout the World. Because of the high temperatures involved (typically 160 to 200°C) it is relatively quick, cooks food right through to the middle, generates a distinctive crust on the food and perhaps most importantly produces rich and complex flavours and food textures, which are very appealing to the consumer. Frying, whether carried out in oils or fats, however also has a number of well-known disadvantages.
  • Cooking oil is expensive: high end olive oils are more expensive per litre than petrol or diesel and the price of even lower end cooking oils is comparable to that of petrol or diesel. Cooking oils have to be replaced frequently as the oils degrade during the cooking process, as more fully explained hereinafter. Also cooking oils (and their breakdown products) are absorbed by the food cooked in them which therefore necessitates the operator of a fryer to regularly keep the oil or fat topped up by the addition of extra cooking oil or fat. Cooking in oil therefore comes at a relatively high price compared to boiling in water or roasting in air.
  • cooking oils and fats are commonly referred to as triglycerides but are in fact triacylglycerols: i.e. triesters of glycerol (1 , 2, 3 propanetriol, which is commonly referred to as glycerine) and three fatty acids.
  • the fatty acids do not need to be of the same type and frequently are not.
  • Oxidation occurs when air comes in contact with frying oil, (see for example Josephson and Lindsey 1987, Journal of Food Sciences, 52, 328 and Fischer and Muller 1991 , Potato Research, 34, 159). Oxygen from the air reacts with the two unsaturated carbons at the double-bond via a free radical initiated reaction. The oxidation reaction is promoted by high cooking temperatures (typically 190°C and above), the presence of metals (including in particular copper and iron) and the presentation to the air of a large surface area of the oil as well as exposure to UV light, which promotes free radical formation. Initially hydroperoxides are produced but these are unstable and at frying temperatures they rapidly break down (via e.g.
  • Some of these secondary oxidation products are volatile and give rise to both pleasant rich flavours but some are also associated with rancid and offensive flavours. For example only 0.08 ppm of pentane is sufficient to reliably produce rancidity, (Warner et al. (1974) Journal of Food Science, 39, 761). Non- volatile compounds, such as core aldehydes, remain in the oil and are absorbed by the food.
  • Hydrolysis is caused by the reaction of water (a weak nucleophile) with the ester linkage in the triacylglycerol molecule to produce initially a
  • free fatty acids are one of the main constituents of smoke haze and are both a fire and a health hazard.
  • the smoke point of an oil is the temperature, at which it is seen to start smoking under specified test conditions.
  • the flashpoint of an oil is the temperature at which volatile products are produced in sufficient concentration and quantity to allow ignition.
  • the fire point of an oil is the temperature at which the rate of production of volatile products is sufficiently high to support continuous combustion of the gases emerging from the surface of the oil.
  • High levels of free fatty acid in cooking oils are associated with reduced smoke, flash and fire points and are thus a significant fire hazard. For example Weiss (Food Oils and Their Uses, Wesport, The AVI Publishing Co.
  • concentration of surfactants in cooking oil on the properties of the food cooked in such oil is well-known (see e.g. Blumenthal MM. A new look at the chemistry and physics of deep fat frying: food technology, 1991 , 45:2, 68 -71, 94).
  • chips are cooked in fresh unused cooking oil they are light in colour and do not have the rich complex aromas associated with fried potatoes.
  • the oil, during this "break in” phase has only low levels of surfactants (such as free fatty acids), which means that the oil has a relatively high surface tension which prevents the oil having close contact with the food.
  • undercooked centre is familiar to many who have eaten at down market fast food establishments, which do not change their cooking oil often enough.
  • oils contain increased amounts of trans-fatty acid side chains on the glycerol backbone, which are a material health hazard.
  • pancreatic enzymes lipases
  • bile secretions The resultant fatty acids and glycerol are then absorbed by cells lining the intestines called enterocytes, where they are re-esterified into triglycerides and transported to the liver as chylomicrons.
  • enterocytes cells lining the intestines
  • the chylomicrons reach the liver, the fatty acids are repackaged into triacylglycerols and
  • trans fatty acids in the diet are associated with raised serum levels of low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and with lower levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol in humans.
  • LDL low density lipoprotein
  • HDL high density lipoprotein
  • Raised serum LDL and reduced serum HDL levels are associated with coronary artery disease, increased risk of stroke and elevated blood pressure as they decrease the health of the endothelium, the cells lining the arteries of the body which are essential for good cardiovascular health.
  • trans fats increase inflammation in the body, a potent risk factor for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other diseases.
  • trans fats cause weight gain, especially increasing abdominal fat, which has the greatest metabolic consequences, and is associated with insulin resistance, a known precursor to type II diabetes.
  • the amount of trans-fatty acids absorbed in the diet should be kept at low levels.
  • One way of achieving that is to reduce the amount of hydrogenated cooking oil absorbed by fried food.
  • Various ways have been suggested to prolong the useful life of cooking oils. Some of these involve the step of removing the cooking oil from the fryer, followed by the step of subjecting it to one or more treatment methods to remove the contaminants before finally returning the treated oil back to the fryer. Other methods provide for at least the complete cessation of the cooking process, treatment and then the recommencement of the use of the oil.
  • US-A4112129 discloses a method of filtering the cooking oil through a composition comprising by weight (i) 47 to 59 parts diatomite, (ii) 28 to 36 parts synthetic calcium silicate hydrate and (iii) 12 to 24 parts synthetic magnesium silicate hydrate.
  • US 4681768A (Mulflur W Jospeph et al) discloses a method for the continuous treatment of cooking oil with a filter made from synthetic calcium silicate. The method involves removal of the oil from the fryer, passing it through the filter and then passing it back into the fryer.
  • GB 2006729 discloses a method for filtering used cooking oils to remove free fatty acids, which uses synthetic calcium silicate but does not disclose an in situ solution suitable for unadapted fryers.
  • US 5870945 discloses a filter cartridge for fitting to a fryer, which includes a mesh housing for containing filtering material which is used to treat the cooking oil outside the fryer prior to its return to the fryer.
  • US 41 12129A discloses a method for extending the life of cooking oil by removing free fatty acids which involves treating the oil with a composition of synthetic calcium silicate hydrate and synthetic magnesium silicate hydrate. US 41 12129A states that the method can be used with conventional cooking oil treatment systems but does not disclose an in situ solution suitable for unadapted fryers which do not have a treatment system.
  • EP 0226413 A discloses a filter container provided with a removable filter bag but which cannot be used during the cooking operation.
  • US 6210732 discloses a method of extending the life of cooking oil by the use of a blend of finely milled citric acid and calcium silicate powder, which is added to the hot oil, left for a certain length of time and then removed by treatment.
  • the US 6210732 invention cannot be used during the cooking process.
  • WO 91/11914A discloses a still further treatment method for used cooking oils, which uses an amorphous silica and alumina composition, which is either added to the hot oil and then filtered out or put in a container which is permeable to the oil but not the treatment composition.
  • the invention disclosed cannot be used during the cooking operation.
  • US 4330564A discloses a method of treating used cooking oil with a composition including a porous carrier, water and a food compatible acid, with the resultant residue being removed by treatment.
  • the invention disclosed cannot be used during the cooking operation.
  • US 3947602 A discloses a method of treating cooking oil with a food compatible acid and a suitable adsorbent such as activated carbon. The invention disclosed cannot be used during the cooking operation.
  • US 5391385 A discloses the treatment of cooking oil with a mixture of 60- 80% amorphous silica and 20 to 40% alumina, the mixture being placed in a permeable container which is then placed in the oil, the container being permeable to the oil but not to the mixture so that the adsorbent is not released into the oil and no treatment is required. All the above treatment methods either require removal of the oil from the fryer and its treatment before reuse and/or cannot be carried out during the normal frying operation with standard frying equipment, which does not include in-line treatment equipment and a pump.
  • US 4764384 A discloses a method of treating used cooking oil with filtering media comprising synthetic amorphous silica, synthetic amorphous magnesium silicate and diatomaceous earth.
  • US 5354570A discloses a method of frying food in cooking oils with a porous rhyolitic powder which selectively reduces the concentration of certain surfactants, whilst the cooking process is on-going.
  • JP 07- 148073 A discloses a method of treating cooking oil using finely pulverized zeolite stones which are inserted into a permeable bag which is itself placed into the fryer, with or without food also being present.
  • filters in a typical restaurant, fast food outlet or pub kitchen fryer has the advantage that it does not require existing frying equipment of the type typically found in such establishments to be modified, the filter materials just being put into the oil and left there until the oil needs to be changed, at which point the filter is discarded. No filtration systems or pumps are required for use with such fryers.
  • Such filters can be used in situ in the oil during use and can prolong the life of the cooking oil so treated typically by up to 100 percent by removing free fatty acids, certain aldehydes and other polar compounds from the oil. They also reduce the amount of cooking oil absorbed by the food and thereby the amount of trans fatty acids digested, where the cooking oil contains trans fatty acid side chains, as many hydrogenated vegetable oils do.
  • Pellets, granules, beads and balls of a set cementious material of the type as disclosed in the BBM Patents are also unsuitable in practice for such fryers as there are concerns about putting large numbers of small loose particles into a deep fat fryer - the concerns being that some of the particles (or bits of them) will end up in the food or block drainage channels, which are typically located near the bottom of the fryer and which are used to drain the fryer of oil when the oil is being changed or the fryer is being cleaned.
  • frying chambers of much large scale industrial frying equipment used for example to pre-fry chips, and to fry crisps and tortilla chips, are similarly shallow and will not readily accommodate filter briquettes in a manner acceptable to the users of such equipment.
  • a method of preserving cooking oil comprising providing in a cooking vessel a body of cooking oil and locating in said body of cooking oil, during at least one period in which deep fat frying of food is not taking place, a cementious filtering medium of the type described in the BBM Patents, and leaving it in situ to effect treatment of the oil until such time as the cooking process is to be restarted, at which point the cementious filtering medium of the type described in the BBM Patents is removed from the cooking oil and kept, during the continuance of frying operations, in a relatively small storage container, where it is submerged in fresh cooking oil at all times other than during its movement between the frying chamber and the storage container.
  • the invention provides a method of treating cooking oil, otherwise than during deep frying operations, which comprises the in situ treatment of the oil with a solid filter treatment material of the type described in the BBM Patents.
  • the invention further comprises a method of retarding the in situ formation of the break down products of the cooking process, including in particular the breakdown products resulting from oxidation, hydrolysis and
  • polymerisation (including in particular free fatty acids, aldehydes and other polar components) which comprises the in situ treatment of the oil, otherwise than during deep frying operations, with a solid filter treatment material of the type described in the BBM Patents.
  • a solid filter treatment material is meant a material having porosity such that (a) cooking oil can defuse into the body of such material and (b) cooking oil break down products can be deposited on or within the body of the material or can react with the material so as to take them out of circulation from the cooking oil.
  • the invention is preferably applicable to the in situ treatment of cooking oil in deep fat fryers of the type used in restaurants, fast food outlets or in pubs which typically have a capacity for approximately 3-12 litres but can also be used with larger fryers including very large fryers of the type used in the industrial scale manufacture of fried food and pre-fried food. It is particularly suited to fryers which have limited clearance between the side walls of the frying basket and the side walls of the fryer. Materials
  • treatment materials that are suitable for use in embodiments of this invention are those cementious materials that are generally of the disclosed in the specifications of the BBM Patents, which are incorporated herein in their entirety by reference.
  • certain additional additives may be added to render the cementious materials so manufactured even more efficacious in the treatment of cooking oil.
  • Particularly suitable treatment materials are cementious materials made substantially from pastes comprising(a) > 50 wt% of (i) white OPC clinker or (ii) white OPC or (iii) a mixture of white OPC clinker and white OPC, and (b) optionally further ingredients selected from silica, titania , lime, calcium sulphate, hydrated alumina, natural feldspars, diatomaceous earth, Na and Ca forms of natural and synthetic zeolites, clays, pillared clays, activated clays/earths, silicate minerals selected from calcium silicate, magnesium silicate, aluminium silicate, agalmatolite, amphiboles,
  • Such pastes advantageously also contain minor amounts of microsilica/silica fume and suitable air entraining agents, as hereinafter described.
  • suitable air entraining agents as hereinafter described.
  • Treatment media were made with Alborg white cement clinker and Alborg White OPC.
  • Alborg white clinker is made using an extremely pure limestone originating from a marine deposit, which is now located in Denmark and was obtained from Aalborg Portland A/S - Denmark, Aalborg Portland A/S, Rordalsvej 44, P.O. Box 165, 9100 Aalborg, Denmark.
  • the unmilled clinker was obtained from Hanson Cement, Ketton Works
  • Ketton, Stamford, Lincolnshire As an alternative to using a mixture of OPC and clinker, the man skilled in the art will readily appreciate that it is possible to make the treatment medium of the invention using either OPC alone or clinker alone, OPC alone being preferred because of its ready availability and ease of handling compared to clinker. Where clinker alone is used in place of a mixture of OPC and clinker then calcium sulphate (anhydrite) must be added to prevent flash setting.
  • a typical composition of the Alborg clinker used is:-
  • the clinker has a very low free iron content which is important as iron is a powerful pro-oxidant trace metal, (see for example Stanford 1979 in Bailey's industrial Oil and fat Products, New York, John Wiley and Sons, Vol l . pp 152).
  • the clinker was milled by an external ball-miller to a "ready-to-use" grain- size of nominally 14.5 ⁇ , with the particle size distribution being such that the d50 was 13.33 ⁇ ⁇ 4.7%, which was approximately the same size as the cement used.
  • the clinker was kept in a dry sealed plastic container to prevent clumping, until use. Both the clinker and the cement were fine sieved immediately prior to mixing to remove any large clumps before the addition of the water.
  • the addition of deionised water is preferred but is not essential to a satisfactory embodiment of the invention disclosed herein.
  • the mix to make the filters comprised three parts of clinker to one part of OPC as well as relatively minor amounts of microsilica (12% by weight of the paste) and a small amount of Microair 1 19, an air entraining agent manufactured by BASF, added in accordance with user instructions.
  • entrained air has been deliberately incorporated into concrete and cement mixtures in parts of the world which experience freezing so as to reduce the damage caused by repeated cycles of freezing and thawing.
  • Chemical additives known as air entraining agents, are used to produce a stable system of discrete air voids, which are typically extremely small being between ⁇ and 1 mm. There are normally more than 1 million such bubbles in one cubic inch of treated paste or more than 60,000 per cubic centimetre.
  • the entrained air void system in cement can be viewed and determined from the examination of a cut and polished section of a hardened cement sample, using microscopic techniques in accordance with ASTM C457 (standard test method for microscopical determination parameters of the air void system in hardened concrete).
  • Such air voids provide empty spaces within the cement or concrete and are known to act as storage sites for freezing water moving in the capillary pores, thereby relieving the pressure generated during freezing and
  • air entraining agents include for example wood derived acid salts, wood rosin, tall oil, vegetable oil acid salts such as the alkanolamine salt of coconut oil, synthetic detergents such as alkyl-aryle sulfonates and sulfates such as dodecylbenzenesulfonate.
  • surfactant used in the invention disclosed herein must be non-toxic. The man skilled in the art will readily be able to identify numerous such non-toxic air entraining agents suitable for use in the invention herein described.
  • the dimensions of the filters were approximately 15 cm x 2 cm x 9 cm with 15 holes each with a diameter of approximately 1 cm: (these figures ignore slight tapering of the filter to facilitate extraction from the mould). Drying
  • demoulded treatment blocks were dried in an industrial oven for at least 18 hours and more preferably for at least 24 hours at a
  • Porosity The porosity of hardened cement paste is discussed by e.g. Alford et al. in their article entitled "An assessment of porosity and pore sizes in hardened cement pastes", J. Materials Sci., 16, (1981) 3105-3114.
  • the porosity of a cementious article can be estimated by firstly weighing the article after it has been dried in an industrial oven (to give weight A) and then immersing it in water at room temperature until the article is fully saturated with water and then weighing it fully saturated (weight B). The total weight of the water taken up is then weight B minus weight A, which when multiplied by the density of the cement/density of water gives a figure which as a percentage of weight A represents the porosity of the filter.
  • the filters made for the purposes of this example had a porosity determined in accordance with the above described method of between 45 to 50%.
  • Treatment Performance Oils develop acidity during frying due to oxidation, hydrolysis and other decomposition routes. Different oils have different oxidation and hydrolysis rates.
  • the free fatty acid level in any given oil in a fryer is determined by the starting FFA level, the subsequent rate of FFA generation and the amount of its elimination by distillation, subsequent oxidation reactions and absorption by food. It is essential therefore if meaningful data on FFA levels are to be obtained to use the same oil throughout all experiments.
  • the trials described herein were all conducted with vegetable oil from the same manufacturer's (KTC) batch, which contains E900 - a PDMS anti-foaming agent. For each frying trial, 15 lots of 900 gms of frozen pre-fried chips were fried each day for five consecutive days in the fryer. The chips used were all from the same batch of potatoes which were kept cool and away from light to minimise starch formation and to reduce variation in the starch content between the batches of chips.
  • treatment with the filters carried out only when no frying operations were on-going produces an improvement in oil quality substantially comparable to full time treatment with the filter and resulted in a material improvement in the oil compared to the no filter treatment condition.
  • the content of total polar compounds in oil can be determined by the use of the methods set out in AOCS Cd_20-91 and ISO 8420. Typically a glass column (for example 35 cm in length and 2.1 cm in diameter) is used to effect the chromatography. A suitable eluent is a mixture of petroleum and diehthyl ether in the ration of 87: 13 (v/v). The oil sample to be tested (2.5 g) is loaded into the packed column and the non-polar compounds (%) is calculated as the mass fraction of the total polar compounds in the oil sample as a percentage.
  • the cooking oil was tested at the end of each days of frying (Frying Trials A & B) and at 1 1.00 on the next day for Trial C - i.e. at the same time as the oil samples for the previously referred to FFA testing (see above) were collected.
  • the cooking oil was analysed using the Testo 270 and the results are tabulated below:-
  • aldehydes are a good indicator of oil quality for several reasons. Firstly aldehydes, even in very low concentrations, are known to cause many of the off- flavours observed in used cooking oils and in food fried in such cooking oils. Secondly such aldehydes are secondary oxidation products, resulting from the breakdown of primary oxidation products and therefore can be seen as a good proxy for the concentration of such primary oxidation products.
  • polyunsaturated fatty acids oxidize and form degradation products with proven toxicity, such as 4-hydroxy-2-(E)-nonenal: (see for example
  • aldehydes of interest include :-

Abstract

A method for preserving cooking oil in situ in the fryer comprises contacting the oil, during at least one period during which frying operations are not on¬ going, with an oil-permeable cementious material which has been hydraulically hardened from a paste comprising: (a) > 50 wt% of (i) white OPC clinker, (ii) white OPC or (iii) a mixture of white OPC clinker and white OPC, and (b) optionally further ingredients selected from silica, titania, lime, calcium sulphate, hydrated alumina, natural feldspars, diatomaceous earth, Na and Ca forms of natural and synthetic zeolites, clays, pillared clays, activated clays/earths, silicate minerals selected from calcium silicate, magnesium silicate, aluminium silicate, agalmatolite, amphiboles, attapulgite, granite porphyry, kaolinite, porphyry, rhyolite, talc and wollastonite. The porosity of the cementious material is between 30-55%. The oil-permeable cementious material is removed from the fryer during frying operations.

Description

IMPROVEMENTS IN FRYING TECHNOLOGY FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to improvements in technology relating to methods for the treatment of cooking oils and fats. INTERPRETATION
In this patent specification references to oils should be interpreted as being references to animal, vegetable, nut or synthetic oils and fats (which are generally solid at room temperatures). References to fryers herein should be taken as including any frying equipment, chamber, pan, tank, commercial, domestic or industrial fryer.
BACKGROUND TO THE INVENTION
Deep fat frying has become one of the most popular methods of cooking in domestic, restaurant and industrial establishments throughout the World. Because of the high temperatures involved (typically 160 to 200°C) it is relatively quick, cooks food right through to the middle, generates a distinctive crust on the food and perhaps most importantly produces rich and complex flavours and food textures, which are very appealing to the consumer. Frying, whether carried out in oils or fats, however also has a number of well-known disadvantages.
Cooking oil is expensive: high end olive oils are more expensive per litre than petrol or diesel and the price of even lower end cooking oils is comparable to that of petrol or diesel. Cooking oils have to be replaced frequently as the oils degrade during the cooking process, as more fully explained hereinafter. Also cooking oils (and their breakdown products) are absorbed by the food cooked in them which therefore necessitates the operator of a fryer to regularly keep the oil or fat topped up by the addition of extra cooking oil or fat. Cooking in oil therefore comes at a relatively high price compared to boiling in water or roasting in air.
The frequent changing of cooking oil in kitchens, restaurants and industrial sites where food items are manufactured is also a labour intensive and laborious task, which is costly and increases equipment down-time. Unfortunately it is not possible to extend the life of cooking oils and fats merely by filtering out food debris particles, which frequently accumulate within them. During use cooking oils and fats do not remain unaltered but begin to chemically breakdown. Cooking oils and fats are commonly referred to as triglycerides but are in fact triacylglycerols: i.e. triesters of glycerol (1 , 2, 3 propanetriol, which is commonly referred to as glycerine) and three fatty acids. The fatty acids do not need to be of the same type and frequently are not. Common chain lengths for the fatty acids, as determined by gas liquid chromatography, are 12 to 24 carbon atoms with 16 and 18 being particularly favoured. The breakdown of such triglycerides is complex, dependent on numerous factors and is subject to numerous feedback effects but involves three well-understood basic mechanisms:
oxidation, polymerisation and hydrolysis.
Oxidation
Oxidation occurs when air comes in contact with frying oil, (see for example Josephson and Lindsey 1987, Journal of Food Sciences, 52, 328 and Fischer and Muller 1991 , Potato Research, 34, 159). Oxygen from the air reacts with the two unsaturated carbons at the double-bond via a free radical initiated reaction. The oxidation reaction is promoted by high cooking temperatures (typically 190°C and above), the presence of metals (including in particular copper and iron) and the presentation to the air of a large surface area of the oil as well as exposure to UV light, which promotes free radical formation. Initially hydroperoxides are produced but these are unstable and at frying temperatures they rapidly break down (via e.g. fission, dehydration and free radical formation) to produce a wide array of secondary oxidation products including polymers, acids, alcohols, esters, aldehydes, methyl ketones, lactones, alcanes, aromatics and other hydrocarbons, (see Belitz and Grosch 1999, Food Chemistry, 2nd edition, Springer- Verlag, Berlin, p. 21 1).
Some of these secondary oxidation products are volatile and give rise to both pleasant rich flavours but some are also associated with rancid and offensive flavours. For example only 0.08 ppm of pentane is sufficient to reliably produce rancidity, (Warner et al. (1974) Journal of Food Science, 39, 761). Non- volatile compounds, such as core aldehydes, remain in the oil and are absorbed by the food.
Polymerisation When cooking oil breaks down, the resulting products form both volatile low boiling point and higher boiling point non- volatile compounds. The non-volatile higher boiling point compounds remain within the frying oil and readily polymerize at frying temperatures above 190°C or in isolated hot spots within the fryer. Such polymerisation products can then bond together to form larger clusters, which can accumulate as an insoluble layer on the surface of the oil, thus preventing water vapour, evaporating from food cooking in the oil, escaping from the oil's surface and thereby producing dangerous foaming, which can lead to fires and personal injury of kitchen staff. The presence of the impermeable polymer layer in turn promotes more hydrolysis in what can become a runway feed-back driven process.
Polymerisation also leads to an increase in the viscosity of the oil which reduces its ability to effect heat transfer and promotes yet more
polymerisation. The increase in viscosity also increases the amount of energy required to effect cooking and thus increases energy bills.
Hydrolysis
Hydrolysis is caused by the reaction of water (a weak nucleophile) with the ester linkage in the triacylglycerol molecule to produce initially a
diaglyceride and a free fatty acid, which then further breakdown to produce various compounds including lactones or simply boil off, depending on chain length, saturation and other factors. The presence of free fatty acids is frequently associated with a characteristic rancid or acidic flavour.
The production of free fatty acids in cooking oils is additionally
problematical for several reasons.
Firstly free fatty acids are one of the main constituents of smoke haze and are both a fire and a health hazard. The smoke point of an oil is the temperature, at which it is seen to start smoking under specified test conditions. The flashpoint of an oil is the temperature at which volatile products are produced in sufficient concentration and quantity to allow ignition. The fire point of an oil is the temperature at which the rate of production of volatile products is sufficiently high to support continuous combustion of the gases emerging from the surface of the oil. High levels of free fatty acid in cooking oils are associated with reduced smoke, flash and fire points and are thus a significant fire hazard. For example Weiss (Food Oils and Their Uses, Wesport, The AVI Publishing Co. 1983) found that a free fatty acid composition of 0.04% was associated with a smoke point of 218°C, a flashpoint of 327°C and a fire point of 366°C whereas for the same oil increasing the free fatty acid content to just 1% percent lead to the smoke point decreasing to 160°C, the flashpoint decreasing to 307°C and the fire point dropping to 360°C.
In addition to being a fire hazard, an increase in the concentration of free fatty acids (and their break down products) in cooking oils also has deleterious effects on the preparation of food cooked in such oils.
Fatty acids and some of their breakdown products, having both distinct hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions, act as effective surfactants. The effect of the concentration of surfactants in cooking oil on the properties of the food cooked in such oil is well-known (see e.g. Blumenthal MM. A new look at the chemistry and physics of deep fat frying: food technology, 1991 , 45:2, 68 -71, 94). When for example chips are cooked in fresh unused cooking oil they are light in colour and do not have the rich complex aromas associated with fried potatoes. The oil, during this "break in" phase has only low levels of surfactants (such as free fatty acids), which means that the oil has a relatively high surface tension which prevents the oil having close contact with the food. The heat from the oil is not effectively transferred across the oil/wet-food barrier and the food is in part boiled rather than fried as the steam emerging from the food pushes a substantial amount of the oil away from its surface. As the oil is used further the amount of free fatty acid and other surfactants increases resulting in improved food quality. During the so-called optimum phase chips cooked in the oil are golden brown in colour and have a significant crust but with relatively low levels of oil being absorbed by the food, which is cooked through to the centre. For example fresh French fries will typically consist of about 10% by weight of oil, when cooking during the so called optimum phase. However as the oil is subject to both further hydrolysis and oxidation, the increase in free fatty acids and other surfactants decreases the surface tension significantly and ensures that the oil can rapidly bridge the otherwise immiscible oil food barrier. This results in the surface of, for example, chips having a characteristic dark and spotted appearance. Excessive contact with the oil rapidly dries the surface region of the food thus trapping moisture deeper in the food and inhibiting heat penetration deeper within the food's centre, which therefore typically is undercooked. The resulting greasy chip with an oil content by weight of typically in excess of about 20%, with a dark spotted exterior and
undercooked centre, is familiar to many who have eaten at down market fast food establishments, which do not change their cooking oil often enough.
The absorption of excessive amounts of cooking oils by food cooked in the oil also very significantly increases the calorific value of the food, thus giving many consumers extra calories they do not need and promoting obesity and the numerous health problems associated with it including in particular type II diabetes.
Further the absorption of excessive amounts of cooking oil by food has other important consequences for health. Hydrogenated vegetable oils and fats are widely used in cooking due mainly to their increased stability, resistance to oxidation, longer shelf-life and their greatly increased resistance to rancidity.
However such oils contain increased amounts of trans-fatty acid side chains on the glycerol backbone, which are a material health hazard. After ingestion most of the initial digestion of cooking oils is accomplished in the stomach via specialist pancreatic enzymes (lipases) and bile secretions. The resultant fatty acids and glycerol are then absorbed by cells lining the intestines called enterocytes, where they are re-esterified into triglycerides and transported to the liver as chylomicrons. When the chylomicrons reach the liver, the fatty acids are repackaged into triacylglycerols and
phosphatidylcholine and thence into lipoproteins. High levels of trans fatty acids in the diet are associated with raised serum levels of low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and with lower levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol in humans. Raised serum LDL and reduced serum HDL levels are associated with coronary artery disease, increased risk of stroke and elevated blood pressure as they decrease the health of the endothelium, the cells lining the arteries of the body which are essential for good cardiovascular health. Studies in humans further demonstrate that trans fats increase inflammation in the body, a potent risk factor for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other diseases. Studies in primates have demonstrated that trans fats cause weight gain, especially increasing abdominal fat, which has the greatest metabolic consequences, and is associated with insulin resistance, a known precursor to type II diabetes.
For all these reasons the amount of trans-fatty acids absorbed in the diet should be kept at low levels. One way of achieving that is to reduce the amount of hydrogenated cooking oil absorbed by fried food. Various ways have been suggested to prolong the useful life of cooking oils. Some of these involve the step of removing the cooking oil from the fryer, followed by the step of subjecting it to one or more treatment methods to remove the contaminants before finally returning the treated oil back to the fryer. Other methods provide for at least the complete cessation of the cooking process, treatment and then the recommencement of the use of the oil.
Oil Removal and Treatment Methods
US-A4112129 (Duensing et al., Johns Manville) discloses a method of filtering the cooking oil through a composition comprising by weight (i) 47 to 59 parts diatomite, (ii) 28 to 36 parts synthetic calcium silicate hydrate and (iii) 12 to 24 parts synthetic magnesium silicate hydrate.
US 4681768A (Mulflur W Jospeph et al) discloses a method for the continuous treatment of cooking oil with a filter made from synthetic calcium silicate. The method involves removal of the oil from the fryer, passing it through the filter and then passing it back into the fryer.
GB 2006729 (Johns Manville) discloses a method for filtering used cooking oils to remove free fatty acids, which uses synthetic calcium silicate but does not disclose an in situ solution suitable for unadapted fryers. US 5870945 discloses a filter cartridge for fitting to a fryer, which includes a mesh housing for containing filtering material which is used to treat the cooking oil outside the fryer prior to its return to the fryer.
US 41 12129A discloses a method for extending the life of cooking oil by removing free fatty acids which involves treating the oil with a composition of synthetic calcium silicate hydrate and synthetic magnesium silicate hydrate. US 41 12129A states that the method can be used with conventional cooking oil treatment systems but does not disclose an in situ solution suitable for unadapted fryers which do not have a treatment system. EP 0226413 A discloses a filter container provided with a removable filter bag but which cannot be used during the cooking operation.
US 6210732 discloses a method of extending the life of cooking oil by the use of a blend of finely milled citric acid and calcium silicate powder, which is added to the hot oil, left for a certain length of time and then removed by treatment. The US 6210732 invention cannot be used during the cooking process.
WO 91/11914A discloses a still further treatment method for used cooking oils, which uses an amorphous silica and alumina composition, which is either added to the hot oil and then filtered out or put in a container which is permeable to the oil but not the treatment composition. The invention disclosed cannot be used during the cooking operation.
US 4330564A discloses a method of treating used cooking oil with a composition including a porous carrier, water and a food compatible acid, with the resultant residue being removed by treatment. The invention disclosed cannot be used during the cooking operation.
US 3947602 A discloses a method of treating cooking oil with a food compatible acid and a suitable adsorbent such as activated carbon. The invention disclosed cannot be used during the cooking operation. US 5391385 A discloses the treatment of cooking oil with a mixture of 60- 80% amorphous silica and 20 to 40% alumina, the mixture being placed in a permeable container which is then placed in the oil, the container being permeable to the oil but not to the mixture so that the adsorbent is not released into the oil and no treatment is required. All the above treatment methods either require removal of the oil from the fryer and its treatment before reuse and/or cannot be carried out during the normal frying operation with standard frying equipment, which does not include in-line treatment equipment and a pump.
In Situ Treatment of Cooking Oil Other methods are known for the treatment of cooking oil in the vessel where cooking takes place.
US 4764384 A discloses a method of treating used cooking oil with filtering media comprising synthetic amorphous silica, synthetic amorphous magnesium silicate and diatomaceous earth.
US 5354570A discloses a method of frying food in cooking oils with a porous rhyolitic powder which selectively reduces the concentration of certain surfactants, whilst the cooking process is on-going.
JP 07- 148073 A discloses a method of treating cooking oil using finely pulverized zeolite stones which are inserted into a permeable bag which is itself placed into the fryer, with or without food also being present.
The above methods either require the addition of powders to the oil, which is undesirable as they may contaminate and change the texture and taste of any food cooked therein or require a further container to be added to the oil, which will often be problematical during use of the fryer due to space and other constraints.
The WO 2008/015481 and WO 2009/019512 Inventions
WO 2008/015481 and WO 2009/019512 ("the BBM Patents") (BBM
Technology Limited) disclose the use of cementious hydraulically set filters made from ordinary Portland cement (OPC), white cement clinker and mixtures thereof, in the form of standalone briquettes, blocks, pellets, granules or balls, which do not substantially leach calcium or magnesium into cooking oils. The BBM Patents disclose the use of such filters in cooking oils (a) in situ actually in the frying chamber where the food is being fried during the frying operation and also (b) prior to first use when the cooking oil is in a storage container. WO 2009/019512 additionally discloses the use of film or sheet packaging that resists the ingress of water or water vapour for wrapping the filters, after they have been dried to remove free water after hydraulic setting.
The use of such filters in a typical restaurant, fast food outlet or pub kitchen fryer has the advantage that it does not require existing frying equipment of the type typically found in such establishments to be modified, the filter materials just being put into the oil and left there until the oil needs to be changed, at which point the filter is discarded. No filtration systems or pumps are required for use with such fryers. Such filters can be used in situ in the oil during use and can prolong the life of the cooking oil so treated typically by up to 100 percent by removing free fatty acids, certain aldehydes and other polar compounds from the oil. They also reduce the amount of cooking oil absorbed by the food and thereby the amount of trans fatty acids digested, where the cooking oil contains trans fatty acid side chains, as many hydrogenated vegetable oils do.
However a problem that arises with the use of the filters of the type as disclosed in the BBM Patents is that they are unsuitable for smaller fryers of less than about 12 litres. Fryers with a capacity of from about 3 to about 12 litres are very widely used in smaller kitchens due to their lower cost and reduced space requirements. However it is difficult to get a filter briquette of the type disclosed in the BBM Patents into such a fryer when the basket is in the fryer during the frying operation due to the very small volume of such fryers and the typically very limited clearance between the fryer basket and the bottom and side walls of the fryer. Typically such smaller fryers also have either no or a very shallow cool spot below or near the element or burners, into which there is insufficient space to put a filter briquette.
Pellets, granules, beads and balls of a set cementious material of the type as disclosed in the BBM Patents are also unsuitable in practice for such fryers as there are concerns about putting large numbers of small loose particles into a deep fat fryer - the concerns being that some of the particles (or bits of them) will end up in the food or block drainage channels, which are typically located near the bottom of the fryer and which are used to drain the fryer of oil when the oil is being changed or the fryer is being cleaned.
In addition the frying chambers of much large scale industrial frying equipment, used for example to pre-fry chips, and to fry crisps and tortilla chips, are similarly shallow and will not readily accommodate filter briquettes in a manner acceptable to the users of such equipment.
Accordingly there remains a need for a method of treatment for cooking oil which is aimed at the smaller fryer under 12 litres but which can also be used with larger fryers and particularly industrial fryers.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to one aspect of the current invention, there is provided a method of preserving cooking oil, the method comprising providing in a cooking vessel a body of cooking oil and locating in said body of cooking oil, during at least one period in which deep fat frying of food is not taking place, a cementious filtering medium of the type described in the BBM Patents, and leaving it in situ to effect treatment of the oil until such time as the cooking process is to be restarted, at which point the cementious filtering medium of the type described in the BBM Patents is removed from the cooking oil and kept, during the continuance of frying operations, in a relatively small storage container, where it is submerged in fresh cooking oil at all times other than during its movement between the frying chamber and the storage container.
It has surprisingly been found that if the filter medium is left in the oil only during "down" periods, whilst food cooking is not taking place, that a significant and useful amount of treatment of the cooking oil nevertheless occurs. This has the advantage that a filter element, relatively large to the size of the frying chamber, can be used without running into space restrictions due to the small size of the fryer. Accordingly, the invention provides a method of treating cooking oil, otherwise than during deep frying operations, which comprises the in situ treatment of the oil with a solid filter treatment material of the type described in the BBM Patents.
The invention further comprises a method of retarding the in situ formation of the break down products of the cooking process, including in particular the breakdown products resulting from oxidation, hydrolysis and
polymerisation (including in particular free fatty acids, aldehydes and other polar components) which comprises the in situ treatment of the oil, otherwise than during deep frying operations, with a solid filter treatment material of the type described in the BBM Patents. By an essentially solid filter treatment material is meant a material having porosity such that (a) cooking oil can defuse into the body of such material and (b) cooking oil break down products can be deposited on or within the body of the material or can react with the material so as to take them out of circulation from the cooking oil.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Fryers
The invention is preferably applicable to the in situ treatment of cooking oil in deep fat fryers of the type used in restaurants, fast food outlets or in pubs which typically have a capacity for approximately 3-12 litres but can also be used with larger fryers including very large fryers of the type used in the industrial scale manufacture of fried food and pre-fried food. It is particularly suited to fryers which have limited clearance between the side walls of the frying basket and the side walls of the fryer. Materials
The treatment materials that are suitable for use in embodiments of this invention are those cementious materials that are generally of the disclosed in the specifications of the BBM Patents, which are incorporated herein in their entirety by reference. In addition, as further set out herein, certain additional additives may be added to render the cementious materials so manufactured even more efficacious in the treatment of cooking oil.
Particularly suitable treatment materials are cementious materials made substantially from pastes comprising(a) > 50 wt% of (i) white OPC clinker or (ii) white OPC or (iii) a mixture of white OPC clinker and white OPC, and (b) optionally further ingredients selected from silica, titania , lime, calcium sulphate, hydrated alumina, natural feldspars, diatomaceous earth, Na and Ca forms of natural and synthetic zeolites, clays, pillared clays, activated clays/earths, silicate minerals selected from calcium silicate, magnesium silicate, aluminium silicate, agalmatolite, amphiboles,
attapulgite, granite porphyry, kaolinite, porphyry, rhyolite, talc and
wollastonite, wherein the porosity of the cementious material is 30-55%.
Such pastes advantageously also contain minor amounts of microsilica/silica fume and suitable air entraining agents, as hereinafter described. Where clinker alone is used rather than a mixture of OPC and clinker then calcium sulphate (anhydrite) must be added to prevent flash setting.
Treatment media were made with Alborg white cement clinker and Alborg White OPC. Alborg white clinker is made using an extremely pure limestone originating from a marine deposit, which is now located in Denmark and was obtained from Aalborg Portland A/S - Denmark, Aalborg Portland A/S, Rordalsvej 44, P.O. Box 165, 9100 Aalborg, Denmark.
The unmilled clinker was obtained from Hanson Cement, Ketton Works
Ketton, Stamford, Lincolnshire. As an alternative to using a mixture of OPC and clinker, the man skilled in the art will readily appreciate that it is possible to make the treatment medium of the invention using either OPC alone or clinker alone, OPC alone being preferred because of its ready availability and ease of handling compared to clinker. Where clinker alone is used in place of a mixture of OPC and clinker then calcium sulphate (anhydrite) must be added to prevent flash setting.
A typical composition of the Alborg clinker used is:-
Si02 25.0%
Figure imgf000021_0001
Fe203 0.30%
CaO 69.0
This gives a calculated Bogue composition as follows:- C3S 65.0%
C2S 21.0% C3A 5.0% C4AF 1.0% CaS04 0%
The equivalent typical figures for the OPC used in this experiment were:- S03 2.03%
Si02 24.4%
Ai203 1.97%
Fe203 0.34%
CaO 68.6% MgO O.58%
CI 0.01%
Ti02 0.09%
P205 0.30%
K20 0.16% Na2O 0.19%
Thus giving a calculated Bogue composition (corrected to take into account a free lime content of about 3%):
C3S 66.04%
C2S 20.1% C3A 4.64%
C4AF 1.04%
CaS04 3.45% Importantly the clinker has a very low free iron content which is important as iron is a powerful pro-oxidant trace metal, (see for example Sonntag 1979 in Bailey's industrial Oil and fat Products, New York, John Wiley and Sons, Vol l . pp 152). The clinker was milled by an external ball-miller to a "ready-to-use" grain- size of nominally 14.5μπι, with the particle size distribution being such that the d50 was 13.33 μπι ±4.7%, which was approximately the same size as the cement used. Once milled the clinker was kept in a dry sealed plastic container to prevent clumping, until use. Both the clinker and the cement were fine sieved immediately prior to mixing to remove any large clumps before the addition of the water. The addition of deionised water is preferred but is not essential to a satisfactory embodiment of the invention disclosed herein.
The mix to make the filters comprised three parts of clinker to one part of OPC as well as relatively minor amounts of microsilica (12% by weight of the paste) and a small amount of Microair 1 19, an air entraining agent manufactured by BASF, added in accordance with user instructions.
For many years entrained air has been deliberately incorporated into concrete and cement mixtures in parts of the world which experience freezing so as to reduce the damage caused by repeated cycles of freezing and thawing. Chemical additives, known as air entraining agents, are used to produce a stable system of discrete air voids, which are typically extremely small being between ΙΟμπι and 1 mm. There are normally more than 1 million such bubbles in one cubic inch of treated paste or more than 60,000 per cubic centimetre. The entrained air void system in cement can be viewed and determined from the examination of a cut and polished section of a hardened cement sample, using microscopic techniques in accordance with ASTM C457 (standard test method for microscopical determination parameters of the air void system in hardened concrete).
Such air voids provide empty spaces within the cement or concrete and are known to act as storage sites for freezing water moving in the capillary pores, thereby relieving the pressure generated during freezing and
preventing damage to the cement or concrete. The addition of relatively small amounts of air entraining agents to mixtures of the type used to make the filters of the type described in the BBM Patents produces very much more porous filters, which absorb very considerably much more free fatty acids and aldehydes than filters without such air entraining agents. There are a number of well-known types of air entraining agents. Typically these are surfactants and include for example wood derived acid salts, wood rosin, tall oil, vegetable oil acid salts such as the alkanolamine salt of coconut oil, synthetic detergents such as alkyl-aryle sulfonates and sulfates such as dodecylbenzenesulfonate. The surfactant used in the invention disclosed herein must be non-toxic. The man skilled in the art will readily be able to identify numerous such non-toxic air entraining agents suitable for use in the invention herein described.
Thorough mixing of the clinker, the OPC, the air entraining agent and the microsilica, using an industrial mixer took place and then sufficient water was added to give a good paste in accordance with the following mix design:-
Figure imgf000025_0001
Assuming about 10% of the mix was wasted in the mixer and in the moulds this 4.05kg of mix would typically produce about 15 treatment blocks, each with a weight before drying of 240 gms. The paste was then placed into moulds, of the type depicted in figures 1 to 4 of WO/2013/121206 and as further described in that patent application and left to cure for 24 hours at room temperature in curing chambers (essentially closed boxes) where the relative humidity was kept near 100%. After 24 hours the paste was found to be fully set and capable of easy demoulding by manipulation of the flexible sidewalls of the moulds.
The dimensions of the filters were approximately 15 cm x 2 cm x 9 cm with 15 holes each with a diameter of approximately 1 cm: (these figures ignore slight tapering of the filter to facilitate extraction from the mould). Drying
Thereafter the demoulded treatment blocks were dried in an industrial oven for at least 18 hours and more preferably for at least 24 hours at a
temperature of at least 200°C and most preferably 230°C. This prolonged drying at an elevated temperature has surprisingly been found to be essential to produce a filter that does not foam in use. The drying at such elevated temperatures for at least 18 hours and more preferably for at least 24 hours was such so that the weight of the filters did not appreciably further reduce after 18 hours no matter how much longer the filters were dried at this temperature and typical figures are given below in table 4. The weights shown are average weights for ten treatment blocks. Start Weight Temperature Time End weight
235 gm 130°C 6 hours 226 gm
235 gm 130°C 12 hours 220 gm
234 gm 130°C 24 hours 217 gm
236 gms 230°C 6 hours 226 gm
233 gm 230°C 12 hours 218 gm
233 gm 230°C 18 hours 212 gm
235 gm 230°C 24 hours 210 gm
234 gm 230°C 48 hours 209 gm
236 gm 230°C 72 hours 21 1 gm
The filters after drying were left in the oven to cool down and once they were sufficiently cool they were taken out of the oven and immediately individually wrapped with impermeable to water plastics packaging material to prevent any water absorption by them.
Porosity The porosity of hardened cement paste is discussed by e.g. Alford et al. in their article entitled "An assessment of porosity and pore sizes in hardened cement pastes", J. Materials Sci., 16, (1981) 3105-3114. The porosity of a cementious article can be estimated by firstly weighing the article after it has been dried in an industrial oven (to give weight A) and then immersing it in water at room temperature until the article is fully saturated with water and then weighing it fully saturated (weight B). The total weight of the water taken up is then weight B minus weight A, which when multiplied by the density of the cement/density of water gives a figure which as a percentage of weight A represents the porosity of the filter.
The filters made for the purposes of this example had a porosity determined in accordance with the above described method of between 45 to 50%.
Frying trials
Nine sets of trial frying runs were undertaken as follows :- (i) Three frying trials were carried out in a 10L electric fryer with no filter fitted - Frying Trials A;
(ii) Three frying trials were carried out in a 10L gas fryer with one filter in the fryer and left in all the time, both during and between frying trials - Frying Trials B; (iii) Three frying trials were carried out in a 10L gas fryer with one filter in the fryer but only placed in the fryer between frying trials (when it was put in the empty frying basket whilst the oil was still warm from the previous frying operations) and removed immediately prior to the commencement of the next frying trials - Frying Trials C. During frying operations the filter was kept at all times submerged in fresh oil in a relatively small closed storage container.
The frying trials were carried out in a manner described hereinafter.
Treatment Performance Oils develop acidity during frying due to oxidation, hydrolysis and other decomposition routes. Different oils have different oxidation and hydrolysis rates. The free fatty acid level in any given oil in a fryer is determined by the starting FFA level, the subsequent rate of FFA generation and the amount of its elimination by distillation, subsequent oxidation reactions and absorption by food. It is essential therefore if meaningful data on FFA levels are to be obtained to use the same oil throughout all experiments. The trials described herein were all conducted with vegetable oil from the same manufacturer's (KTC) batch, which contains E900 - a PDMS anti-foaming agent. For each frying trial, 15 lots of 900 gms of frozen pre-fried chips were fried each day for five consecutive days in the fryer. The chips used were all from the same batch of potatoes which were kept cool and away from light to minimise starch formation and to reduce variation in the starch content between the batches of chips.
At the end of each day, during Frying Trials A and Frying Trials B a small ample of the oil was collected. For Frying Trials C the sample was collected next day, at 1 1.00 am to give the filter some time to work. All the samples were flushed with nitrogen and kept at minus 20°C, away from any source of light until analysed so as to prevent further breakdown of the oil. The oil samples were allowed to warm back up to room temperature before testing.
The free fatty acid was measured for each sample using a titration procedure (AOCS method Ca 5a-40, IUPAC 2.201, AOAC 940.28 and see IUPAC (1979), Standard Methods for Oils, Fats and Derivatives, 6th edn, Pergamon Press, Oxford, reference 2). The results (expressed as percentages) are tabulated below. The results for each of the three trial runs for Frying Trials A, B anc C were averaged to give the results below:- Day FFA % FFA % FFA %
Frying Trials A Frying Trials B Frying Trials C (no filter) (filter present all (filter present only the time) whilst frying had stopped)
0 0.07 0.06 0.07
End of day 1/ 0.34 0.24 0.23
(start of day 2 for
Frying Trials C)
End of day 21 0.48 0.32 0.35
(start of day 3 for
Frying Trials C)
End of day 31 0.67 0.36 0.42
(start of day 4 for
Frying Trials C)
End of day 4/ 0.87 0.43 0.51
(start of day 5 for
Frying Trials C) End of day 5/ 1.2 0.65 0.72
(start of day 6 for
Frying Trials C)
Thus it can be seen that treatment with the filters carried out only when no frying operations were on-going produces an improvement in oil quality substantially comparable to full time treatment with the filter and resulted in a material improvement in the oil compared to the no filter treatment condition.
Total Polar Compounds
Some authors and experts in the field have questioned how reliable free fatty acid concentration is as a measure of oil quality, (see for example effective Process Control in Frying by GB Quaglia et al at page 237 of Frying,
Improving quality, edited by J.B. Rossell, Woodhead Publishing Limited). Accordingly the amount of total polar compounds was also measured as it is (along with acid value) a very commonly used indicator of oil quality and is widely used in many international regulations: (see for example Fritch, C.W. 1981. Measurements of frying fat deterioration. A brief review. J. Am. Oil Chem Coc. 58: 272-274 and Firestone, D. 2007. Regulation of frying fat and oil, In "Deep Frying: Chemistry, Nutrition, and Practical Applications". 2nd ed. Pp. 373-385. Erickson, M.D. ed. AOCS Press, Urbaba, USA.)
The content of total polar compounds in oil can be determined by the use of the methods set out in AOCS Cd_20-91 and ISO 8420. Typically a glass column (for example 35 cm in length and 2.1 cm in diameter) is used to effect the chromatography. A suitable eluent is a mixture of petroleum and diehthyl ether in the ration of 87: 13 (v/v). The oil sample to be tested (2.5 g) is loaded into the packed column and the non-polar compounds (%) is calculated as the mass fraction of the total polar compounds in the oil sample as a percentage.
However the AOCS Cd_20-91 and ISO 8420 procedures need to be carried out in a laboratory with proper equipment by a skilled technician and are not suitable for on site testing. Accordingly we used a Testo 270 Deep frying oil tester (Testo Inc. Germany), which gives a more or less instantaneous reading of total polar compounds as a percentage when its probe is put into the oil to be tested and used in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions. The oil to be tested was tested at 55 °C in all cases.
The cooking oil was tested at the end of each days of frying (Frying Trials A & B) and at 1 1.00 on the next day for Trial C - i.e. at the same time as the oil samples for the previously referred to FFA testing (see above) were collected. The cooking oil was analysed using the Testo 270 and the results are tabulated below:-
Day TPC % TPC % TPC %
Frying Trials A Frying Trials B Frying Trials C (no filter) (filter present all (filter present only the time) whilst frying had stopped)
0 5.2 5.5 5.6
End of day 1/ 8.4 6.4 6.2
(start of day 2 for
Frying Trials C)
End of day 2/ 1 1.9 7.1 8.2
(start of day 3 for
Frying Trials C)
End of day 3/ 15.7 11.8 1 1.2
(start of day 4 for
Frying Trials C) End of day 4/ 19.2 13.4 14.1
(start of day 5 for
Frying Trials C)
End of day 5/ 20.1 16.5 17.0
(start of day 6 for
Frying Trials C)
Thus it can be seen that the total polar compound concentration was substantially comparable as between the oil treated with the filters all the time and oil treated with the filters only whilst cooking operations were no longer on-going.
Aldehydes
The aldehyde concentration of the oil was also ascertained as described below. Aldehydes are a good indicator of oil quality for several reasons. Firstly aldehydes, even in very low concentrations, are known to cause many of the off- flavours observed in used cooking oils and in food fried in such cooking oils. Secondly such aldehydes are secondary oxidation products, resulting from the breakdown of primary oxidation products and therefore can be seen as a good proxy for the concentration of such primary oxidation products.
Thirdly many aldehydes are considered to be injurious to human health, (see for example Warning: thermally-stressed polyunsaturates are damaging to health, Martin Grootveld, Christopher J.L. Silwood and Andrew W.D.
Claxson Food Chemistry 67 (1999) 211 - 213). During frying,
polyunsaturated fatty acids oxidize and form degradation products with proven toxicity, such as 4-hydroxy-2-(E)-nonenal: (see for example
Seppanen CM, Csallany AS (2001) Simultaneous Determination of
Lipophilic Aldehydes by High-Performance Liquid Chromatography in Vegetable Oil. J Am Oil).
Particular aldehydes of interest include :-
(a) trans-2-alkenals
(b) trans,trans-alka-2,4-dienals, (c) 4,5-epoxy-trans-2-alkenals
(d) 4-hydroxy-trans-2-alkenals
(e) cis,trans-alka-2,4-dienals and
(f) n-alkanals. Oil samples collected from the previous FFA testing were analysed and detection and measurement of the concentrations of such aldehydes was determined in accordance with the methodology as set out on pages 22 to 23 of WO 2008/015481 A2, which is incorporated by reference herein and the 5 results are tabulated below. 20 gm samples of the oil were taken, after the oil had cooled. The samples were then flushed with nitrogen and kept at minus 20°C away from any source of light until analysed so as to prevent further breakdown of the oil. The results are tabulated below:-
Figure imgf000037_0001
10 All units are mmol/kg oil detected in 1HMR experiments conducted on
sunflower oil.
Again the results show that the treatment with the filters carried out whilst no frying operation was on-going produced a treatment result which was substantially comparable to that achieved when the filters were in the cooking oil both during and between cooking periods.

Claims

A method for preserving cooking oil in situ in the fryer which comprises contacting the oil, during at least one period during which frying operations are not on-going, with an oil-permeable cementious material in the form of either stand-alone blocks, pellets, granules, or balls and which has been hydraulically hardened from a paste comprising: (a) > 50 wt% of (i) white OPC clinker, (ii) white OPC or (iii) a mixture of white OPC clinker and white OPC, and (b)
optionally further ingredients selected from silica, titania , lime, calcium sulphate, hydrated alumina, natural feldspars, diatomaceous earth, Na and Ca forms of natural and synthetic zeolites, clays, pillared clays, activated clays/earths, silicate minerals selected from calcium silicate, magnesium silicate, aluminium silicate, agalmatolite, amphiboles, attapulgite, granite porphyry, kaolinite, porphyry, rhyolite, talc and wollastonite, wherein the porosity of the cementious material is between 30-55% and removing the said oil-permeable cementious material from the fryer during frying operations.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the paste also mcludes at least 5% by weight of microsilica.
3. The method of any proceeding claim, wherein the paste also includes anhydrite.
4. The method of any proceeding claim, wherein the paste also includes a non-toxic air entraining agent.
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US10974180B2 (en) 2017-08-30 2021-04-13 Durafry Solutions, Llc Cooking oil treatment filtration aid and method

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