Unique volatile compounds may help generate sweetness in Borneo oranges.The Pontianak orange--Citrus nobilis var. microcarpa--is the sweet-flavored orange originally cultivated on the Borneo island of Indonesia. This cultivar cultivar Any variety of a plant, originating through cloning or hybridization (see clone, hybrid), known only in cultivation. In asexually propagated plants, a cultivar is a clone considered valuable enough to have its own name; in sexually propagated plants, a is well known by Indonesians for its distinct flavor and sweetness. Scientists at the National University of Singapore characterized the volatile compounds of Pontianak oranges. The flavor compounds of freshly-squeezed Pontianak orange juice were extracted using headspace solid phase micro-extraction (SPME) and solvent extraction methods with diethyl ether. This was done prior to separation and identification with gas chromatograph-mass spectrometry (GC-MS GC-MS Gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy. See there. ). The volatile compounds of hand-squeezed Pontianak orange peel oil were also identified after direct injection with GC-MS. The researchers detected and identified around 70 flavor compounds in Pontianak orange juices and peel oils. These include terpenes terpenes (terˑ·pēnz), n.pl a large-sized group of unsaturated hydrocarbons with the empirical formula (C5H8)n. , carbonyls, alcohols and esters as well as hydrocarbons. The peel oil displayed a distinct profile of volatile compounds from that of the juice. This was illustrated by the detection of some volatile compounds only in the juice. As in other citrus fruits, the researchers found limonene to be the major compound in the Pontianak orange. Other characteristic compounds of citrus fruits, such as myrcene, alpha-pinene, linalool linalool a natural insecticidal compound found in oil extracted from citrus peel. Similar in activity to d-limonene. , perilla perilla (p However, some compounds not commonly found in citrus fruits were identified in Pontianak orange juice. These include 4-ethenyl cyclohexene, diethyl carbonate, dibutyl sulfide and 2,6-dimethyl naphthalene naphthalene (năf`thəlēn'), colorless, crystalline, solid aromatic hydrocarbon with a pungent odor. It melts at 80°C;, boils at 218°C;, and sublimes upon heating. . These may possibly be the compounds that help create the sweetness and distinct flavor of Pontianak oranges. Further information. Jorry Dharmawan, Food Science and Technology Program, National University of Singapore, Block S3, Level 6, Science Drive 4, Singapore 117543, Singapore; phone: +65 6516 6666; email: jorry@nus.edu.sg. |
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