Affiliation:
1. Institute of Polymer Technology and Nanotechnology, Facultad de Arquitectura Diseño y Urbanismo, University of Buenos Aires-CONICET Intendente Güiraldes, 2160 (C1428EGA) Ciudad de Buenos Aires Argentina lherrera@fi.uba.ar
Abstract
Trans-fat legislation forced the food industry to reformulate its products. Tropical fats are semi-solid edible vegetable fats and natural sources of symmetrical stearic-rich triacylglycerols (TAGS). These fats do not contain trans-fat but have a high percentage of saturated fats. To lower saturated fatty acid content, tropical fats are blended or interesterified with vegetable oils to obtain free trans-fat, low-saturated fat shortenings. These formulations, improved from the nutritional point of view, widen tropical fat applications in margarines, non-dairy creams, shortenings for bakery and frying, chocolate, and confectionery. In this chapter, the physicochemical properties of hydrogenated oils are compared to those of tropical fats, and several successful examples of tropical fat formulations used as trans-fat alternatives are reported.
Publisher
The Royal Society of Chemistry