| Literature DB >> 30502149 |
Dana Alina Magdas1, Ioana Feher2, Gabriela Cristea3, Cezara Voica3, Alexandra Tabaran4, Marian Mihaiu4, Darius Victor Cordea4, Valentin Adrian Bâlteanu5, Sorin Daniel Dan4.
Abstract
The present study proposed the cheese differentiation, according to geographical production area and with respect to species (cow, sheep) of two traditional cheese specialties, (salty and ripened), produced in Transylvania, Romania. For this purpose, the elemental profile and carbon isotopic ratios (13C/12C) of cheese and extracted casein were corroborated through statistic supervised techniques to get the best discrimination markers. The manganese content, along with Rare Earth Elements (REE) concentrations, proved to be very powerful predictors, for the traditional salted cheese mainly, due to the direct influence of the local salted water. Despite that proposed techniques are not acknowledged methods for species differentiation, this approach allowed a successful discrimination of the animal species that produced the raw materials for cheese manufacturing (milk). The results generated by the developed chemometric model, for species differentiation, were compared with those obtained using Isoelectric focusing (IEF) and DNA tests. The proposed association of isotopic and elemental markers allowed a differentiation better than 92% for geographical provenance, of each investigated cheese specialties while, for species discrimination (cow vs. sheep) a percentage of 100% was obtained.Entities:
Keywords: Cheese authentication; Elemental profile; Isotopic ratios; Species discrimination
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30502149 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2018.10.103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514