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HMF
(HydroxyMethylFurfuraldehyde) is used as an indicator
of heat and storage changes in honey.
- HMF
is formed by the breakdown of fructose in the presence of an
acid.
- Heat
increases the speed of this reaction.
- The
increase in speed is exponential with increasing heat.
- HMF
occurs naturally in most honeys and usually increases with the
age and heat treatment of honey.
- HMF's
occurrence and accumulation in honey is variable depending on
honey type.
While
today HMF is used as an indicator of heating or storage at elevated
temperatures, it was first used (as early as 1908) as an indicator
of the adulteration of honey with invert syrups (syrups of glucose
and fructose). Cane sugar (sucrose) is "inverted" by
heating with a food acid, and this process creates HMF. However
it was quickly realized that heated natural honey also had higher
levels of HMF and therefore the interest switched from being an
indicator of adulteration, to that of an indicator of heating
and storage changes. It should be noted however that high
levels of HMF (greater than 100 mg/kg) can still be an indicator
of adulteration with inverted sugars.
It should be noted that HMF is not a harmful substance
in levels found in food. Many sugar type products (e.g. Golden
Syrup, Molasses etc.) have levels of HMF that are 10-100 times
that of honey. Many food items sweetened with high fructose corn
syrups, e.g. carbonated soft drinks, can have levels of HMF between
100 and 1,000 mg/kg.
Fresh natural honey can have varying levels of HMF. Normally this
is below 1 mg/kg but levels soon start to rise with ambient temperatures
above 20°C. It should be noted that temperatures in the beehive
can rise to over 40°C during summer months (when the main
honey crop is in progress). It is usual for HMF to be below 10
mg/kg in fresh extracted honey. Levels higher than this may indicate
excessive heating during the extraction process.
Many countries impose maximum levels for HMF. The Codex
level is currently set at 80 mg/kg, but was set at 40mg/kg for
many years, a level still used in Germany, the World's largest
importer. This twofold difference in imposed levels shows that
HMF is not a simple subject and that many anomalies arise throughout
the varied honey World.
Honey that is traded in a bulk form is usually required to be
below 10 or 15mg/kg to enable further processing and then give
some shelf life before a level of 40 mg/kg is reached. It is not
uncommon for honey sold in hot climates to be well over 100 mg/kg.
This is mostly due to the ambient temperatures (over 35°C)
that honey is exposed to in the distribution channel.
The time taken to accumulate HMF
at varying temperatures has had considerable research. The most
important thing to remember is that this is variable. However
work by White, Kushnir & Subers in 1964 indicated the following
approximate ranges for accumulation of HMF.
|
Time
for 30 mg/kg HMF to accumulate (based on 3 samples)
|
| 30°C |
100-300
days |
It
can be seen that honey held at an ambient temperature over
30°C for 6 months will accumulate more HMF than the
same honey flash heated to 70°C for 5 minutes and then
rapidly cooled. |
| 40°C |
20-50
days |
| 50°C |
4-10
days |
| 60°C |
1-2.5
days |
| 70°C |
3-5
hours |
| 80°C |
<
2 hours |
Measuring HMF
There are 3 main methods in current use for measuring HMF.
The oldest of these is "The Winkler" method. This
method is a photometric method that is used extensively in
Germany. It used to be listed in the AOAC but was dropped
some years ago due to concerns regarding the carcinogenic
nature of one of the reagents (toluidine). The two methods
currently in the AOAC are a direct measurement using HMF's
absorbance at 284nm and an HPLC method that uses the same
absorbance property. The HPLC method is the most recent method
added to the AOAC and is gaining widespread popularity. We
use the HPLC method at Airborne.
There are often diferences in results between the methods
due to unforseen or unresearched variabilities in some honeys.
It is important to use comparable methods when comparing results
for specific samples.
Additional
References - 107kb
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