Fish oils extracted from marinated herring (frozen and unfrozen) byproducts and maatjes herring byproducts were evaluated on their chemical and sensory properties. The obtained crude oils had very low content of copper (<0.1 mg/kg oil), and iron values were 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrude and fatty acid composition analyses were performed on fillets, byproducts, and oil originating from herring (Clupea harengus) caught off the North Sea from June 1999 to January 2001. Monthly statistical differences were found in the fat content, the range of variation being larger in fillets than in byproducts. The most consistent change observed in fillets was an increase of unsaturation from May to September reflected in a reduced percentage of monounsaturated fatty acids, whereas for byproducts and oil this trend was not so well defined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHerring oils produced from three different types of byproducts, only heads, mixed, and headless byproducts, were compared. Heads byproducts and its oil presented the highest oxidation levels and the lowest alpha-tocopherol content. Heads contained the lowest polyunsaturated fatty acids content and the highest amount of saturated fatty acids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Agric Food Chem
August 2001
Fish oil has been extracted from byproducts of the maatjes (salted) herring production using a pilot plant consisting of a mincer, heat exchanger, and three-phase decanter. The crude herring oil obtained had an initial peroxide value (PV), anisidine value (AV) and free fatty acids (FFA) level of only 3 mequiv of peroxide/kg of lipid, 8.9, and 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComprehensive multidimensional gas chromatography can adequately resolve very complex mixtures of analytes such as the fatty acid mixtures which are contained in, e.g., fish and vegetable oils.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo clarify fish flesh quality problems and softening of fish muscle tissue during chilled storage, the collagen content, types I and V, and its changes in solubility during storage on ice in muscle of farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) were analyzed. The contents of acid-soluble, pepsin-soluble, and insoluble collagen in white muscle were determined in fresh fish muscle and after 3 days of storage in ice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF