1. Evaluating the rancidity and quality of discarded oils in fast food restaurants
- Author
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Aziz Zargaraan, Zahra Saghafi, Yeganeh Salmani, Fatemeh Mohammadi-Nasrabadi, Khadijeh Khoshtinat, Hedayat Hosseini, Fatemeh Esfarjani, and Manochehr Bahmaei
- Subjects
quality assessment ,Quality assessment ,rancidity ,fast food restaurants ,Environmental science ,discarded oils ,lcsh:TX341-641 ,Peroxide value ,Food science ,lcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,Original Research ,Food Science - Abstract
This cross‐sectional study attempts to determine the rancidity and quality of discarded oils in fast food restaurants. Samples of the discarded frying oils were collected randomly from 50 fast food restaurants in Tehran, Iran. Their physicochemical properties were assessed and compared to the standard values. The means (±SD) of the physicochemical indicators of the rancidity in the discarded oils were as follows: peroxide value, 3.06 (0.51) (mEq/kg); free fatty acids content, 1.52 (2.26) (%); p‐anisidine value, 57.63 (4.02) (mEq/kg); total oxidation value, 64.53 (4.15); total polar compounds (TPC), 20.19 (1.02) (%); viscosity, 107.87 (2.35) (cp); and red color, 9.64 (0.84). Positive correlations were found between the TPC, viscosity, and red color (p ≤ 0.01) of the oil samples. The majority of discarded oil from fast food restaurants were overdegraded containing hazardous secondary oxidative products, and also, the consumption of nonstandard frying oil has increased in fast food restaurants. Policymakers should develop guidelines to determine whether and when frying oils should be discarded and consider the consumption of overdegraded oils as a public health hazard.
- Published
- 2019