Study on physiochemical properties and the halalness of commercially marketed vinegar in Malaysia
Vinegar is very popular as traditional ingredient for cooking, pickling, and preservation. It is made from sugar or starch by an alcoholic and acetous fermentation and produces ethanol as a by-product. Alcohol is prohibited to be consumed for Muslim or used as ingredient if it is exceeding the al...
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Faculty of Food Science & Technology, Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM)
2017
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iium-574582019-08-17T07:03:42Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/57458/ Study on physiochemical properties and the halalness of commercially marketed vinegar in Malaysia Jamaludin, Mohd Aizat Md Amin, Nur Alifah Ahmad Fadzillah, Nurrulhidayah Muflih, Betania Kartika Othman, Rashidi Abdullah Sani, Muhammad Shirwan Ramli, Mohd Anuar TP368 Food processing and manufacture TS155 Production management Vinegar is very popular as traditional ingredient for cooking, pickling, and preservation. It is made from sugar or starch by an alcoholic and acetous fermentation and produces ethanol as a by-product. Alcohol is prohibited to be consumed for Muslim or used as ingredient if it is exceeding the allowable limit as stated by Islamic Council in Malaysia. According to Fatwa Committee National Council of Islamic Religious Affairs Malaysia, natural occurrences of ethanol in food products are acceptable if the ethanol contents are less than 1% in beverages and 0.5% for flavoring or coloring substances for the purpose of stabilization. On the other hand, for specific vinegar product, as stated by Malaysian Food Act and Regulation, acetic acid content must be at least 4%. According to FAO/WHO, a product is to be labelled as vinegar if the acetic acid content is 6% and with a maximum residual alcohol content of 0.5%v/v for wine vinegar and 1%v/v for other vinegars. This study investigated the physiochemical properties of the vinegar from different sources of raw materials. Total solubility (TA) by using Brix method, pH, and alcohol and acetic acid content by GC-TOF/MS of 12 commercial vinegars from Malaysia and abroad were studied. The result shown that for pH value of commercial vinegar are ranged from 2.51-3.14°Brix from 2.10-40.73°Brix, acetic acid is ranged from 0.0253-0.1276% and ethanol content from 0-0.5911%. Thus, this study will come out with the clear observation on ethanol content in fermented product which is vinegar in order to categories the halalness of the product that available in Malaysia market especially the ones that are produced internationally. Lastly, as shown by the profiling study, vinegar that are imported internationally may contain some amount of alcohol in contrast with the one that locally produced in Malaysia and has Halal certification. Faculty of Food Science & Technology, Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM) 2017-12 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/57458/1/57458_Study%20on%20physiochemical%20properties.pdf application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/57458/7/57458_Study%20on%20physiochemical%20properties_scopus.pdf Jamaludin, Mohd Aizat and Md Amin, Nur Alifah and Ahmad Fadzillah, Nurrulhidayah and Muflih, Betania Kartika and Othman, Rashidi and Abdullah Sani, Muhammad Shirwan and Ramli, Mohd Anuar (2017) Study on physiochemical properties and the halalness of commercially marketed vinegar in Malaysia. International Food Research Journal (IFRJ), 24 (Suppl.). S428-S435. E-ISSN 2231-7546 http://www.ifrj.upm.edu.my/24%20(07)%202017%20supplementary/(26)%20R1.pdf |
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TP368 Food processing and manufacture TS155 Production management |
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TP368 Food processing and manufacture TS155 Production management Jamaludin, Mohd Aizat Md Amin, Nur Alifah Ahmad Fadzillah, Nurrulhidayah Muflih, Betania Kartika Othman, Rashidi Abdullah Sani, Muhammad Shirwan Ramli, Mohd Anuar Study on physiochemical properties and the halalness of commercially marketed vinegar in Malaysia |
description |
Vinegar is very popular as traditional ingredient for cooking, pickling, and preservation. It is
made from sugar or starch by an alcoholic and acetous fermentation and produces ethanol as
a by-product. Alcohol is prohibited to be consumed for Muslim or used as ingredient if it is
exceeding the allowable limit as stated by Islamic Council in Malaysia. According to Fatwa
Committee National Council of Islamic Religious Affairs Malaysia, natural occurrences of
ethanol in food products are acceptable if the ethanol contents are less than 1% in beverages
and 0.5% for flavoring or coloring substances for the purpose of stabilization. On the other
hand, for specific vinegar product, as stated by Malaysian Food Act and Regulation, acetic acid
content must be at least 4%. According to FAO/WHO, a product is to be labelled as vinegar if
the acetic acid content is 6% and with a maximum residual alcohol content of 0.5%v/v for wine
vinegar and 1%v/v for other vinegars. This study investigated the physiochemical properties
of the vinegar from different sources of raw materials. Total solubility (TA) by using Brix
method, pH, and alcohol and acetic acid content by GC-TOF/MS of 12 commercial vinegars
from Malaysia and abroad were studied. The result shown that for pH value of commercial
vinegar are ranged from 2.51-3.14°Brix from 2.10-40.73°Brix, acetic acid is ranged from
0.0253-0.1276% and ethanol content from 0-0.5911%. Thus, this study will come out with
the clear observation on ethanol content in fermented product which is vinegar in order to
categories the halalness of the product that available in Malaysia market especially the ones
that are produced internationally. Lastly, as shown by the profiling study, vinegar that are
imported internationally may contain some amount of alcohol in contrast with the one that
locally produced in Malaysia and has Halal certification. |
format |
Article |
author |
Jamaludin, Mohd Aizat Md Amin, Nur Alifah Ahmad Fadzillah, Nurrulhidayah Muflih, Betania Kartika Othman, Rashidi Abdullah Sani, Muhammad Shirwan Ramli, Mohd Anuar |
author_facet |
Jamaludin, Mohd Aizat Md Amin, Nur Alifah Ahmad Fadzillah, Nurrulhidayah Muflih, Betania Kartika Othman, Rashidi Abdullah Sani, Muhammad Shirwan Ramli, Mohd Anuar |
author_sort |
Jamaludin, Mohd Aizat |
title |
Study on physiochemical properties and the halalness of commercially marketed vinegar in Malaysia |
title_short |
Study on physiochemical properties and the halalness of commercially marketed vinegar in Malaysia |
title_full |
Study on physiochemical properties and the halalness of commercially marketed vinegar in Malaysia |
title_fullStr |
Study on physiochemical properties and the halalness of commercially marketed vinegar in Malaysia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Study on physiochemical properties and the halalness of commercially marketed vinegar in Malaysia |
title_sort |
study on physiochemical properties and the halalness of commercially marketed vinegar in malaysia |
publisher |
Faculty of Food Science & Technology, Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM) |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://irep.iium.edu.my/57458/ http://irep.iium.edu.my/57458/ http://irep.iium.edu.my/57458/1/57458_Study%20on%20physiochemical%20properties.pdf http://irep.iium.edu.my/57458/7/57458_Study%20on%20physiochemical%20properties_scopus.pdf |
first_indexed |
2023-09-18T21:21:13Z |
last_indexed |
2023-09-18T21:21:13Z |
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