Jm. Aguilera et H. Gloria, DETERMINATION OF OIL IN FRIED POTATO PRODUCTS BY DIFFERENTIAL SCANNING CALORIMETRY, Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, 45(3), 1997, pp. 781-785
Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) was used to determine the oil
uptake of commercial frozen par-fried potatoes after frying at 180 deg
rees C in colza/soybean oil. The enthalpy and temperature range of the
crystallization peak for the pure frying oil were 47.2 J/g and -44 to
-50 degrees C, respectively. DSC was performed by cooling samples of
crust and core of fried potatoes from 10 to -60 degrees C at 1 degrees
C/min and the oil content calculated from the peak area. The crust co
ntained almost 6 times as much oil as the central core (23.6% vs 4%, d
ry weight basis), as visualized by light microscopy. Only 87% of the o
il in the intact crust can be removed by solvent extraction, the rest
being extractable only after grinding. Deviation between DSC and Soxte
c extraction methods was less than 3%. The DSC method is fast, specifi
c, and reliable, does not use solvents, requires smaller samples (<100
mg) than conventional solvent extraction methods, and can also detect
freezable water.