ABSTRACT

Given the inherent complexity of food products, most instrumental techniques employed for quality and authenticity evaluation (e.g., chromatographic methods) are time demanding, expensive, and involve a considerable amount of manual labor. Therefore, there has been an increasing interest in simpler, faster, and reliable analytical methods for assessing food quality attributes. Spectroscopic Methods in Food Analysis presents the basic concepts of spectroscopic methods, together with a discussion on the most important applications in food analysis.

The determination of product quality and authenticity and the detection of adulteration are major issues in the food industry, causing concern among consumers and special attention among food manufacturers. As such, this book explains why spectroscopic methods have been extensively employed to the analysis of food products as they often require minimal or no sample preparation, provide rapid and on-line analysis, and have the potential to run multiple tests on a single sample (i.e., non-destructive). This book consists of concepts related to food quality and authenticity, that are quite broad, given the different demands of the manufacturer, the consumer, the surveillance and the legislative bodies that ultimately provide healthy and safe products.

part I|314 pages

Fundamentals and Instrumentation

chapter 1|32 pages

Introduction to Spectroscopy

chapter 2|34 pages

UV–Vis Spectroscopy

part II|112 pages

Applications

chapter 11|10 pages

Food Composition

chapter 12|26 pages

Food Authentication

chapter 13|10 pages

Food Adulteration

part III|212 pages

Food Products

chapter 17|12 pages

Novel and Conventional Spectroscopic Study of Cereals and Cereal Products

Molecular Structure, Chemistry, Imaging, and Nutrition

chapter 19|24 pages

Coffee

chapter 21|30 pages

Dairy Products

chapter 23|18 pages

Fruits and Vegetables

chapter 24|20 pages

Other Food Products