dc.description.abstract |
Vateria Copallifera is a valuable endemic herbal plant which belongs to the family of
Dipterocarpaceae. Usage of Hal bark is abundant as a natural preservative and debittered
Hal seeds are utilized for food processing as a healthy food source. Since Hal seeds contain
a bitter taste, the traditional practice of removing the bitter taste is, packing scraped seeds in
a jute bag and then placing the bag in a running water stream for at least overnight. Therefore,
in this study changes of chemical composition occurred during the traditional debittering
process was investigated. Freshly scraped Hal seeds were packed in jute bags and placed it
in an artificially formulated running water stream (Stream velocity was 69.16 ml/sec) for 12
hours. Freshly scraped Hal seeds and de-bittered Hal seeds were used for the analysis of
chemical composition. Standard methods were used to determine moisture content,
carbohydrate content, total mineral content, protein content, fat content and crude fiber
content. Changes in minerals, fatty acids, starch, sugars were determined by using, ICPOES, GC-MS, spectrophotometry and HPLC methods respectively. According to the results,
reduction percentages of carbohydrate content, ash content, fat content and crude fiber
content were (15.5%), (0.84%),(1.07 %) and (0.92 %) respectively during the traditional debittering process. However, no change in protein content (4.025±2.89 g/100g) in between
de-bittered and fresh Hal seeds was assessed. Results of the fatty acid profile showed that,
fresh Hal seeds contain mainly, oleic acid (36.93%) and palmitic acid (29.74 %) and they
were reduced up to 31.56 % and 20.10 % respectively during the de-bittering process. Total
starch content was reduced by 0.09 % and amylose content was reduced by the same
percentage. Only Sucrose (0.7%) was determined by HPLC in fresh Hal seeds and none of
the sugars were detected in the de-bittered Hal seeds. Mineral contents (K, Ca, Mg) have
fluctuated while Potassium content was significantly decreased during the debittering
process. However, results revealed that, there was a significant reduction on the chemical
composition of Hal seeds during the traditional practice of debittering process. |
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