• Title/Summary/Keyword: instant noodle soup base

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Detection of Hydrocarbons to Determine Post-Irradiation of Dry Soup Base Ingredients in Instant Noodle (라면 건조 스프 재료의 방사선 조사 검지를 위한 Hydrocarbon류 검출)

  • Hwang, Keum-Taek;Park, Jun-Young
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.30 no.5
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    • pp.1018-1023
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    • 1998
  • Hydrocarbons in dry soup base and its ingredients in instant noodle were analyzed to determine whether the analysis of hydrocarbons is a potential method to detect post-irradiation of the soup base. Soup base ingredients were irradiated individually, irradiated before mixing, or mixed after irradiation. Lipids were extracted with hexane and hydrocarbons were separated from the lipids through Florisil column. The hydrocarbons were analyzed with GC. Hydrocarbons C17:2, C16:3, C17:1, and C16:2 were detected in palm oil, red pepper powder, and sesame seeds irradiated at 10 kGy, but not in unirradiated ones. C17:2, C16:3, C17:1, and C16:2 were not detected in the soup base mixture of unirradiated ingredients. The four hydrocarbons were detected in the soup base mixture using irradiated palm oil or sesame seeds. In the mixture using irradiated red pepper powder, C17:2 and C16:3 were detected. When the soup mixture was irradiated after mixing unirradiated ingredients, C17:2, C17:1, and C16:2 were detected in the sample irradiated at 1 kGy, and C17:2, C16:3, C17:1, and C16:2 were in large amounts at 5 and 10 kGy.

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Detection of Post-Irradiation of Dry Soup Base Ingredients in Instant Noodle by Thermoluminescence Technique (라면 건조 수프 재료의 방사선 조사 검지를 위한 Thermoluminescence 활용)

  • Hwang, Keum-Taek;Byun, Myung-Woo;Wagner, Ute;Dehne, Lutz I.
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.30 no.4
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    • pp.759-766
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    • 1998
  • It was determined whether thermoluminescence (TL) technique is a potential method to detect post-irradiation of dry soup base mix for instant noodle and its ingredients. The ingredients or the mixtures were irradiated, from which minerals were isolated using sodium polytungstate solution. Their TL signals (1st glow TL intensity/2nd glow TL intensity reirradiated at 48.6 Gy) were measured. The TL signals in temperature ranges of $229{\sim}295^{\circ}C$ and $229{\sim}361^{\circ}C$ showed larger differences between unirradiated and irradiated samples compared to other ranges. The average TL signals for unirradiated garlic powder, ginger powder, black pepper powder, onion powder, red pepper powder, and sesame seeds were below 0.2, while those for onion powder, red pepper powder, and sesame seeds irradiated at 10 kGy were over 20 in the two temperature ranges. The average TL signals for unirradiated soup mixture were 0.08 and 0.1, respectively, in the two temperature ranges, while those for the mixtures containing 10 kGy-irradiated onion powder, red pepper powder, and sesame seeds individually or in combination were over 7. The average TL signals for the mixtures irradiated 1, 5, and 10 kGy were over 10.

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