pepper (2)

31103967886?profile=RESIZE_400xThe EC-JRC manuscript entitled "Interlaboratory validation of thirteen qPCR methods to quantify adulterants in culinary spices and herbs”, has recently been published (open access) in the journal of European Food Research and Technology.

The paper describes the results of a recent inter-laboratory trial using 13 qPCR assays for the detection of  significant adulterants in  paprika/chili, turmeric, saffron, cumin, oregano and black pepper.  For paprika, adulterants tested were maize seed, tomato, and sunflower seed.  For saffron, adulterants were safflower and Mexican marigold.  For cumin, carroway seed.  For turmeric, maize seed, rice seed, oat seed and bell pepper.  For oregano, goose-foot leaf.  For black pepper, rice seed.

The thirteen qPCR methods had already passed in-house validation criteria (from an original pool of 30 methods – results previously published).  This study was an inter-laboratory trial involving fifteen European laboratories. For each method the participants received DNA templates of binary mixtures for five standard samples together with five test samples of unknown adulterant concentration. Interlaboratory validation parameters included repeatability, reproducibility and trueness. Measurement uncertainties, limits of detection and limits of quantification were also determined.

The authors report that, after data examination and outlier removal, relative repeatability standard deviation ranged from 4% to 25%, relative reproducibility standard deviation ranged from 6% to 25% and trueness bias ranged from − 11% to 27%.

They conclude that the thirteen qPCR methods are therefore fully validated and may be included in international standards for deployment in official control laboratories.

Photo by Tamanna Rumee on Unsplash

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This paper (open access) reports the construction of a classification model to detect the adulteration of white pepper with mung bean flour utilizing Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy combined with chemometric techniques.

The authors prepared their own reference samples in-house by grinding locally sourced white pepper (Malaysian origin) with bean flour ranging from 3 – 50%.

They report that adulterants can be detected even at the lowest concentration prepared using the Partial Least Squares (PLS) method and chemometrics.. The second derivative FTIR spectrum in the range of 3712-650 cm⁻¹ was identified as the optimal calibration model.  The PLS Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA) method also successfully classified pure white pepper samples from those adulterated with various concentrations of mung bean flour.

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