Olives and Olive Oil as Functional Foods: Bioactivity, Chemistry and ProcessingApostolos Kiritsakis, Fereidoon Shahidi The only single-source reference on the science of olives and olive oil nutrition and health benefits Olives and Olive Oil as Functional Foods is the first comprehensive reference on the science of olives and olive oil. While the main focus of the book is on the fruit’s renowned health-sustaining properties, it also provides an in-depth coverage of a wide range of topics of vital concern to producers and researchers, including post-harvest handling, packaging, analysis, sensory evaluation, authentication, waste product utilization, global markets, and much more. People have been cultivating olives for more than six millennia, and olives and olive oil have been celebrated in songs and legends for their life-sustaining properties since antiquity. However, it is only within the last several decades that the unique health benefits of their consumption have become the focus of concerted scientific studies. It is now known that olives and olive oil contain an abundance of phenolic antioxidants, as well as the anti-cancer compounds such as squalene and terpenoids. This centerpiece of the Mediterranean diet has been linked to a greatly reduced risk of heart disease and lowered cancer risk. Bringing together contributions from some of the world’s foremost experts on the subject, this book:
Edited by two scientists world-renowned for their pioneering work on olive oil and human health, this book is an indispensable source of timely information and practical insights for agricultural and food scientists, nutritionists, dieticians, physicians, and all those with a professional interest in food, nutrition, and health. |
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Contents
| 13 | |
| 30 | |
| 35 | |
| 45 | |
| 81 | |
Mechanical harvesting of olives | 117 |
Olive fruit harvest and processing and their effects on oil functional compounds | 127 |
Application of HACCP and traceability in olive oil mills and packaging units and their | 147 |
Composition and analysis of functional components of olive leaves | 383 |
Production of phenolenriched olive oil | 401 |
a Mediterranean source of polyphenols | 417 |
Bioactive components from olive oil as putative epigenetic modulators | 435 |
Phenolic compounds of olives and olive oil and their bioavailability | 457 |
Antiatherogenic properties of olive oil glycolipids | 471 |
Nutritional and health aspects of olive oil and diseases | 483 |
an added value to olive oil | 505 |
Integrated olive mill waste OMW processing toward complete byproduct recovery | 177 |
Olive oil quality and its relation to the functional bioactives and their properties | 205 |
Optical nondestructive UVVisNIRMIR spectroscopic tools and chemometrics in | 221 |
Oxidative stability and the role of minor and functional components of olive oil | 249 |
Chemical and sensory changes in olive oil during deep frying | 267 |
recent developments | 279 |
processing nutritional and health implications | 295 |
Greekstyle table olives and their functional value | 325 |
Food hazards and quality control in table olive processing with a special reference | 343 |
acrylamide in Californian table olives | 353 |
Antioxidants of olive oil olive leaves and their bioactivity | 367 |
Analysis of olive oil quality | 521 |
Detection of extra virgin olive oil adulteration | 537 |
Authentication of olive oil based on minor components | 555 |
New analytical trends for the measurement of phenolic substances of olive oil and olives | 569 |
DNA fingerprinting as a novel tool for olive and olive oil authentication traceability | 587 |
Sensory properties and evaluation of virgin olive oils | 603 |
International standards and legislative issues concerning olive oil and table olives | 629 |
marketing prospects and opportunities | 647 |
Future Research Needs | 659 |
