Athens, Georgia
March 25, 2005By
Sharon Omahen
Georgia Faces
University of Georgia
Red wine's health benefits
coming to a host of new peanut products
University of Georgia food
scientists have found a way to increase a key cancer and heart
disease preventative in peanuts to levels far higher than those
in red wine.
University of Georgia food
scientists have found a way to increase a key cancer and heart
disease preventative in peanuts to levels far higher than those
in red wine.
Experts often tout the benefits
of red wine as a source of resveratrol, an antioxidant proven to
protect against cancer and cardiovascular disease.
"American diets are high-fat,
and the incidence of heart disease is high in this country,"
said Anna Resurreccion, the UGA food scientist who led the
project at the Food Innovation and Commercialization Center in
Griffin, Ga.
The French
Paradox
"The French eat high-fat diets,
too, yet heart disease levels are low there," she said. "This is
what's referred to as the French Paradox. They attribute their
health to the red wine they drink."
The peanuts Resurreccion
modifies in her lab have up to 12.3 times more resveratrol than
red wine. "A study of 29 different wines showed an average of .6
micrograms per gram and, in exceptional cases, 5 micrograms per
gram," she said. "Our resveratrol-enhanced peanuts have almost 8
micrograms per gram."
Having increased levels of
resveratrol available in peanuts, she said, opens up avenues to
many new products that can carry its "cancer chemopreventive and
anticardiovascular-disease compounds" in meals and snacks.
Perfect
for peanut lovers
"Young children can't very well
drink wine," she said. "But most of them love peanut butter and
peanut snack foods."
Peanuts with increased
resveratrol will help Georgia peanut farmers and food
manufacturers, too.
"This technology will help
increase the number of product lines made using
resveratrol-enhanced peanuts and will give the manufacturers a
competitive advantage," Resurreccion said. "We used a runner
variety of peanuts, so Georgia farmers will benefit as well."
Resurreccion is now partnering
with Belle Plantations, Inc., of Georgia to use
resveratrol-enhanced peanuts to commercially manufacture peanut
flour.
Both the enhanced peanuts and
their flour by-product will be used to make products like pasta,
candy bars, snacks, cakes, breads, power shakes and other health
drinks, she said. Peanut butter with increased resveratrol is
another possible product.
Resurreccion and her UGA
colleagues first thought of increasing peanut resveratrol levels
after reading reports that boiled peanuts contained higher
levels of the compound.
So how do they do it?
Stress is
the key to the process
"The method involves slicing
the peanut kernels into tiny pieces," Resurreccion said. "This
causes the first stress. Then we apply an additional stress
through ultrasound technology."
Because the nuts have to be
sliced, the scientists haven't been able to increase the
resveratrol levels in whole nuts.
So far, the only drawback to
the project is a slight off-flavor detected in a peanut butter
prototype by a consumer panel and verified by the university's
trained taste panel.
"Overall, the consumer panel
was receptive to the peanut butter product, but they did detect
a slight difference in flavor," Resurreccion said. "Our UGA
trained panel noted that it was not as roasted-peanutty
tasting."
UGA has applied for a patent
for the new process. Food scientists there are ready to
fine-tune the process to get the highest resveratrol levels and
best flavor possible.
For the past four years,
Resurreccion and graduate student, Jamie Rudolf, have been
developing the technology as part of a multiyear, $1 million
U.S. Peanut Collaborative Research Support Program grant. The
grant also resulted in the development of a chocolate peanut
spread and a reduced-calorie, cracker-coated, peanut snack.
The project also led to
Resurreccion's Vitamin-A fortified peanut butter, which is being
commercially produced in the Philippines to alleviate deficiency
symptoms, including blindness, in 35 percent of the children
there. |