Pectinase use in olive oil extraction processes

2022 ◽  
pp. 269-282
Author(s):  
Hysla Maria Albuquerque Resende Nunes ◽  
Eduarda Nataly de Andrade Soares ◽  
Brenda Lohanny Passos Santos ◽  
Denise Santos Ruzene ◽  
Daniel Pereira Silva
2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 622-632
Author(s):  
Pietro Toscano ◽  
Maurizio Cutini ◽  
Luciana Di Giacinto ◽  
Maria Gabriella Di Serio ◽  
Carlo Bisaglia

In olive oil extraction processes, different operating methods used for the preparation of olive pastes significantly affect their rheological characteristics, as well as the extraction yields and qualitative characteristics of the oils. To enhance and improve the characteristics of high-quality EVOOs (Extra Virgin Olive Oils), milling technologies have implemented olive pitting in the preparation of olive pastes to be processed for olive oil extraction. Commonly used pitting machines employ the percussion and centrifugal projection of drupes, which often involve the heating of pastes, breaking of kernels, and emulsion of oils. Aiming to improve olive oil pitting processes, the CREA Research Centre for Engineering and Agri-food Processing in Treviglio, Italy, has conceived an alternative method, which is based on the low-speed constriction and mutual abrasion of drupes inside a rotative working chamber. This paper describes the process that led to the hypothesis of an innovative pitting method and to the validation of the hypothesis through the development of a lab-scale pitter prototype. The development steps and the assessment of the results of the prototype trials are reported.


1898 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 209-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. R. Paton ◽  
J. L. Myres

This paper is an attempt to interpret certain stones, which have come to light recently on ancient sites in Karia, as parts of ancient oil-presses, on the ground that they are well adapted to fulfil certain purposes which are still essential to the modern native process of oil extraction in that part of Asia Minor and in the adjacent islands. The inference is that the ancient process closely resembled the modern in the principal features which are recounted below.The Modern Method of extracting olive oil consists of the two processes of grinding and pressing.In the most primitive mode of grinding which is still in use, the olives are crushed either on a flat stone by a roller, or in a stone trough by a millstone rolling on its edge. In more modern grinders two mill-stones are used, which revolve in a circular trough, as in the grinding of kaolin or cement. The process of grinding seems never to have varied, except as regards the power which is employed; horses having been substituted for men, and steam for horses. In Algeria and Tripoli the circular trough goes back at least to Roman times.


2015 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 193-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilyes Dammak ◽  
Marcos Neves ◽  
Safa Souilem ◽  
Hiroko Isoda ◽  
Sami Sayadi ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 126 ◽  
pp. 82-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Amirante ◽  
E. Distaso ◽  
P. Tamburrano ◽  
A. Paduano ◽  
D. Pettinicchio ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rubén González-Vicente

AbstractThis article analyzes the developmental impact of two of the earliest investments made by Chinese companies in South America, the Shougang Corporation's mining activities in Peru and Andes Petroleum’s oil extraction operations in Ecuador. The article draws attention to the importance of contextualizing and disaggregating instances of Chinese resource-based investment in order to adequately grasp the complexity of processes that are contingent to particular regimes of natural resource governance, companies’ backgrounds, and the strength and nature of local reactions, among other factors. It thereby encourages a critical examination of Chinese investment in South America that explores how the characteristics of that investment are reshaped by the long and contested histories of resource extraction in the region, the promotion of and resistance to particular visions of development, the agency of multiply situated and complex actors, and the wider transnational production networks in which resource extraction processes are embedded.


2011 ◽  
Vol 66-68 ◽  
pp. 598-607
Author(s):  
Yang Li ◽  
Lian Zhou Jiang ◽  
Chen Wang ◽  
Xiao Nan Sui

In this study, different oil extraction processes, such as extrusion pretreatment, ultrasound-ethanol assisted demulsification and traditional hexane extraction of oil, were employed to extract oil from soybean in order to compare their different effects on oil quality, fatty acid distribution and VE content of oil. The result shows that the quality of oil from extrusion pretreatment aqueous enzyme extraction (EAEP) of oil and ultrasound-ethanol assisted demulsification aqueous enzyme extraction of oil were same. The raw oil quality from the above two processes was better than the hexane extraction of oil. The fatty acid contents of oil were similar in different oil extraction processes. The VE content of oil from ultrasound-ethanol assisted demulsification process was decreased, while the extrusion pretreatment aqueous enzyme extraction of oil had no influence on VE concentration.


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