R. Sengupta et Dk. Bhattacharyya, ENZYMATIC EXTRACTION OF MUSTARD SEED AND RICE BRAN, Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society, 73(6), 1996, pp. 687-692
Aqueous enzymatic extraction was investigated for recovery of oil from
mustard seed and rice bran. The extraction process was reproducible b
ased on statistical analysis of extraction data under different extrac
tion conditions. The most significant factors for extraction were the
time of digestion with enzymes, seed or bran concentration in water, v
olume of hexane added before recovery, and amount of enzyme(s) used. T
he pretreatment steps of each material before enzyme digestion influen
ced oil yield. Quality of enzyme-extracted mustard oil was better with
respect to color and odor than commercial expeller-extracted and Soxh
let-extracted oils. Most of the characteristics of rice bran oil were
identical to those of commercial solvent-extracted oils, but rice bran
oil had a lower content of colored substances and higher acidity (fre
e fatty acid). Enzymatic extraction led to recovery of a protein conce
ntrate with increased protein and reduced fiber and ash contents in th
e mustard and rice bran meals.